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Full text of "The Columbian World's Fair atlas : containing complete illustrations of the World's Fair grounds and buildings, general illustrations of the public buildings, parks, monuments, street scenes, etc. of Chicago, and maps of every state and territory of the United States and Canada, and general maps of the world"

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THE COLUMBIAN 

World’s Fair Allas 

CONTAINING 


COMPLETE ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE WORLD’S FAIR GROUNDS 
AND BUILDINGS, GENERAL ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE 
PUBLIC BUILDINGS, PARKS, MONUMENTS, STREET 
SCENES, ETC., OF CHICAGO, AND MAPS OF 
EVERY STATE AND TERRITORY OF 
THE UNITED STATES AND 

CANADA, 


AND 

General Maps of the World. 


PUBLISHED l*'OR 

H. STILES’ SONS & CO., 

DEALERS IN 

Dry Goods, Carpets, Etc. 


Corner Park Avenue and Market Street, 

WARREN, OHIO. 
























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TflBLB OF CONTENTS. 

WORLD’S COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION.—Its Origin, Present Condition, Grounds, Etc., II, 12. 

WORLD’S FAIR BUILDINGS—Illustrations and Descriptions. 


Administration Building. 

Agricultural Building. 

Agricultural and Machinery Hall. 

Electrical Building. 

Fine Arts Building. . 

Fisheries Building. 


Page. 


Page. 

43 

General Ground Plan . 

. 15 

29 

Government Building. 

. 31 

37 

Horticultural Building. 

. 23 

21 

Illinois State Building. 

... 17 

27 

39 

Machinery Hall. 



Page. 

Manufactures and Liberal Arts Building.. 33 

Mines and Mining Building. 25 

Transportation Building. 41 

Woman’s Building . 19 

World’s Fair Grounds..'. .,. 37 


CHICAGO. 

ILLUSTRATIONS—Business Houses, Clubs, Charitable Institutions, Colleges and Public Buildings. 


Alexian Brothers’ Hospital. 

Calumet Club.. 

Chicago in 1845. 

Chicago Medical College. 

College of Physicians and Surgeons. 

Cook County Hospital. 

Cook County Infirmary. 

Cook County Insane Asylum. 

Court House—before the fire. 

Court House in 1852. 

Court House... 

Crib. 

Criminal Court Building. 


Page. 

59 

63 

45 

57 

59 

59 

57 

57 

51 

51 

51 

55 

53 


First Regiment Armory. 

Foundling’s Home. 

Hahnemann Medical College. 

Historical Society. 

Homeopathic College. 

Hospital for Women and Children, 

Inter-State Exposition. 

Marine Hospital. 

Masonic Temple... 

Michael Reese Hospital. 

Odd-Fellows’ Temple (proposed).. 
Old City Hall. 


Page. 
53 
59 
57 
47 
53 
59 
45 
57 
75 
57 
' 73 

47 


Old Fort Dearborn (1803) 

Old Kinzie Mansion. 

Old People’s Home. 

Rush Medical College. 

Union League Club House . .. 

Water Tower. 

Water Works. 

Water Works in 1854 . 

Wolf’s Point in 1870. 

Wolf’s and Miller’s Taverns .. 
Woman’s Temperance Temple 
Woman’s Medical College. 


Adams and Aberdeen sts. 63 

Drexel Fountain. .. i. 71 

First building erected after the fire. 71 

Garfield Park. 65-67 

Humboldt Park. 65-67 


Views in the Parks and along the Residence Streets 

Jefferson Park. 65 

Jackson Park. 67 

Lincoln Park. 65-69 

Michigan ave. and 22d st. 63 

Ontario and Rush sts. 63 


Prairie ave. and 20th st .. 
Prairie ave. and 22d st ... 

Ruins after the fire. 

Union Park. 

Washington Driving Park 


Page. 

49 

45 

57 

59 

53 

55 

55 

55 

49 

49 

77 

57 


63 

63 

61 

65 

67 


DIAGRAMS. 


Coal—consumption. 

Coal—production of the United States 

Coal—production of the world. 

Coal fields of the world. 


Page. 

- 

Page. 

189 

Cotton—production and consumption.. 

189 

187 

Drink of all nations. 

190 

187 

Gold—production of the United States 

188 

189 

Lakes, area of. 

187 

190 

Oceans and Seas, area of. 

186 

189 

188 

Orchard—production of United States. 

188 


Page. 

Silver—production of United States. 188 

Sugar—production. 190 

Teas—production and consumption... 100 

Wheat Crop of the United States (1890) .. 186 

Wheat Crop of the World (1890). 186 

Wines and Liquors, degrees of alcohol in.. 189 


Corn — production of the United States . 

TABLE—Showing distances from Chicago to all principal cities of the United States, and their population. 13, 14 

~MAPS OF MODERN GEOGRAPHY. 



MAPS. 


MAPS 

| MAPS. 

AFRICA . 

180-lbl 

INDIANA.. 

99 

OCEANICA. 

179 

ALASKA . 

86 

INDIAN TERRITORY. 

12? 

| PALESTINE. 

170-171 

ALABAMA . 

114 

IOWA. 

103 

PENNSYLVANIA . 

94-95 

ARIZONA. 

123 

IRELAND.... 

149 

PORTUGAL.. 

152 

ARKANSAS. 

117 

ITALY. 

160 

QUEBEC..... 

82 

A ST A . 

166-167 

KANSAS. 

105 

!RHODE ISLAND.. 

89 

AUSTRIA . 

159 

KENTUCKY. 

97 

RUSSIA. 

163 

AUSTRALIA. 

178 

LOUISIANA. 

116 

[SCOTLAND. 

148 

BELGIUM . 

151 

MAINE. 

87 

SOUTH AMERICA. 

142-143 

CALIFORNIA. 

130-131 

MARYLAND. 

93 

SOUTH CAROLINA. 

111 

CENTRAL AMERICA. 

140 

MASSACHUSETTS .. 

89 

SOUTH DAKOTA . 

109 

CHINA . . . 

176-177 

MEXICO. 

140 

SPAIN. 

152 

COLORADO . 

121 

AIICIIIGAN. 

100 

SWEDEN. 

150 

CONNECTICUT . 

89 

MISSISSIPPI... 

115 

SWITZERLAND. 

156 

CUB \ ... 

14? 

MISSOURI. 

104 

TASMANIA. 

178 

DELAWARE. 

93 

MINNESOTA. 

107 

TENNESSEE... 

97 

DENMARK . 

151 

MONTANA. 

126 

TEXAS. 

118-119 

EGYPT . 

174 

NEW HAMPSHIRE. 

88 

TURKEY.. 

161 

EMOTAND . . 

145 

NEW YORK . 

90-9? 

UNITED STATES. 

84-85 

ETTEOPE . . 

144 

NEW MEXICO. 

122 

UTAH. 

124 

FLORIDA . 

113 

NFW JERSEY. 

92 

VERMONT. 

88 

EE A AT HE . 

153 

NEBRASKA. 

106 

VIRGINIA. 

96 

DEEM ANY ....... 

157 

NEVADA . 

132 

WALES . 

145 

GEORGIA . 

112 

NORTH CAROLINA... 

110 

WASHINGTON. 

128 

GREECE . 

161 

NORTH DAKOTA.. 

108; 

WEST VIRGINIA. 

96 

HOLLAND . 

151 

NORWAY. 

150 

WISCONSIN.*. 

101 

IDAHO . 

127 

OHIO. 

98 

WORLD—Globular. : . 

79 

TLLTNOIS . 

102 

ONTARIO. 

83 

“ —Mercator. 

80-81 

INDIA. 

172 

OREGON. 

129 

WYOMING. 

125 


BIBLICAL MAPS.182, 183, 184, 185. 

MAPS AND PLANS OF CITIES. 



Page. 


Page. 


Page. 

BOSTON . 

. 136 

CHICAGO. 

. 133 

NEW YORK. 

.134-135 

BERLIN Germany . 

.. 158 

JERUSALEM. 

. 168 

PARIS.... 

.154-155 

CALCUTTA India. 

. 173 

LONDON. 

.146-147 

PHILADELPHIA. 

.138-139 

CONSTANTINOPLE, Turkey. 

. 162 

NAPLES, Italy. 

. 165 

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia. 

. 164 



















































































































































































































































































































































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... CHICAGO ... 

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Yellowstone Notional 1 *ai'fc 

THE DIRECT ROUTE TO THE FAMOUS 

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SCENE ALONG THE WISCONSIN CENTRAL LINES. 


FOR PAMPHLETS, DESCRIPTIVE OF SUMMER RESORTS, ADDRESS, 


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CHICAGO , ILLINOIS. 


O AND FROM THE NORTHWEST. 


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Pullman vestiDuied Sleepers. 


DEPOT WISCONSIN CENTRAL LINES, CHICAGO. 

Corner Fifth Avenue and Harrison Street, 


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C.B.&Q.R.R. 


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LINCOLN, KANSAS CITY 


DENVER, 


ST. JOSEPH, 


ATCHISON, 

ST. PAUL, 
MINNEAPOLIS. 












































































































The Columbian 

The World’s Columbian Exposition, at Chicago, U. S. 

A., will open on May i, 1893. The Exposition is under the 
auspices of the United States Government. Its participants 
include not only the United States Government and the forty- 
four States and five Territories of the American Union, but 
also nearly every foreign government. Its international char¬ 
acter is assured. 

GENERAL INFORMATION. 

Jackson Park and Midway Plaisance—the Exposition 
site—are in the southeastern part of Chicago, and embrace 
664 acres, with a frontage of about a mile and a half on Lake 
Michigan. Forty-five miles of boulevard connect the site 
with the general park system of Chicago, which embraces 
fifteen or more parks, aggregating 2,000 acres. 

Half a million of dollars has already been expended in 
grading Jackson Park, and dredging extensive waterways 
throughout it. Hundreds of thousands are yet to be spent 
for landscape gardening, fountains, statuary, pleasure boats, 
etc. A number of observation towers, from which excellent 
views of the buildings and grounds can be obtained, will be 
erected in different parts of the Park. 

According to present plans fully 150 restaurants and 
cafes will be in operation in the various buildings and about 
the grounds. These will be conveniently distributed, and 
will have an aggregate seating capacity of 6,000 or 8,000. 

Midway Plaisance, connecting Jackson Park with Wash¬ 
ington Park, will be occupied throughout its entire length 
by speciaL Exposition features, largely of a foreign char¬ 
acter, such as the “Bazaar of All Nations,” “Street in Cairo,” 
“Street in Constantinople,” “Moorish Palace,” “Maori Vil¬ 
lage,” etc., to which concessions have been granted, and which, 
in their production, will represent the expenditure of hun¬ 
dreds of thousands of dollars. Panoramas, cyclorainas, the 
sliding railways, etc., will also be located there. 

A single entrance fee, probably 50 cents, will entitle 
visitors to see the entire Exposition proper. The special 
attractions on Midway Plaisance will make a moderate addi¬ 
tional charge. 

The hotel accommdations of Chicago, already very ex¬ 
tensive, are being augmented by the erection of fully twenty 
new hotels, some of which are very large. Two million 
dollars or more are to be spent by the city and the. park 
commissioners in putting the streets, parks, etc., in presentable 
condition against the influx of visitors. 

It maybe said to be assured that the exhibits at the Ex¬ 
position will cover a wider range and be far more numerous 
than were ever before gathered together. They will present 
a picture of the condition and industrial progress of man¬ 
kind in every quarter of the world, and of its achievements 
in every branch of the sciences and arts. The Exposition 
classification embraces 12 departments, 176 groups, and 967 
classes. The application for space by intending exhibitors 
in the United States alone, numbered 2,082 on January 1. 
The number at the Philadelphia Centennial on correspond¬ 
ing date was 864. Applications from foreign exhibitors are 
reported very numerous and rapidly increasing. It seems 
assured that the exhibitors will outnumber those at any 
previous world’s fair. The allotment of space will be made 
about June. The reception of exhibits will begin about 
November 1, 1892, and continue until April 10, 1893. No 
charge will be made for space for exhibits. 


4Aorlds Fair. 

The Exposition buildings, as required by Act of Con" 
gress, will be dedicated “with appropriate ceremonies,” on 
October 12, 1892, the 400th anniversary of the discovery of 
America by Columbus. Thfe exercises will occupy three 
days, beginning on the nth and closing on the 13th with a 
grand dedication ball. The Committee having the matter 
in charge has planned to make the ceremonies most impres¬ 
sive in character. Something like $300,000 will be spent to 
secure this end. The President of the'United .States and his 
Cabinet, the Senate and House of Representatives, the Gov¬ 
ernors of the several States with their staffs, and representa¬ 
tives of all foreign nations, will be invited to be present. 
The mobolizatiori of 10,000 militia and several thousand 
regulars is planned, as is also an imposing civic and indus¬ 
trial display. In the evenings there will be a magnificent 
display of fireworks, and in the Park waterways a pageant 
of symbolical floats, representing the “ Procession of the 
Centuries.” In the dedicatory exercises on the 12th, the 
completed buildings will be tendered by the President of the 
Exposition to the National Commission. President T. \Y- 
Palmer will accept them on behalf of that body and will at 
once present them to the President of the United States, who 
will fittingly respond. The dedicatory oration will follow- 
Much attention is being given to the musical portion of the 
programme. This will include a dedicatory ode and orcher- 
tra marches written for the occasion. These, and other 
numbers, including “America ” and “Star Spangled Banner,” 
will be rendered with full choral and orchestral accom¬ 
paniment. 

In April, 1893, a grand international naval review, pre¬ 
liminary to the opening of the Exposition, as provided for 
by Act of Congress, will be held in New York harbor. 
Arrangements for this are now being made. 

The Exposition will open its doors to the public on May 
1, 1893, anc l dose them on October 30, of the same year. 

WATER, SEWERAGE, LIGHTING, ETC. 

To supply the Exposition buildings and grounds with 
water two plants are being put in, one with a capacity of 
24,000,000 gallons a day, and the other of 40,000,000 gallons. 
Thus 64,000,000 gallons a day will be available. The pump¬ 
ing works and ail of the great machinery furnishing power 
to the Exposition, will be open to the inspection of visitors. 

A system for drainage, believed to be adequate and 
perfect, has been adopted. Perfect sewerage, too, has been 
planned. AH refuse from the cafes and kitchens, and from 
the lavatories and closets, of which 6,500 will be constructed, 
at an expense of some $450,000, will be received by injectors, 
and forced by compressed air through underground pipes 
into huge tanks, where it will be treated chemically and 
rendered entirely inoffensive. Work upon these systems is 
progressing. 

Plans adopted for lighting the buildings and grounds 
provide for 138,218 electric lamps, of which 6,766 are to be 
arc lamps of 2,000 candle power each, and 131,452 incan¬ 
descent, 16 candle power each. The electric lighting will 
cost something like $1,500,000, and will be ten times as ex¬ 
tensive as was employed at the Paris Exposition. The light 
and motive plant at the Exposition, it is estimated, will 
require 26,000 horse power, of which 22,000 will be required 
for the electric plant. 












THE EXPOSITION BUILDINGS. 

The size and cost of the great Exposition buildings are 
indicated in the following table: 


BFILDIXGS. 


Dinx'ii- 
sioii8 in 
feet. 


Man’f'rs and Liberal Arts 

Administration. 

Mines. 

Electricity. 

Transportation. 

“ Annex. 

tVr.nen's. 

Art Galleries. 

“ Annexes (2»_ 

Fisheries. 

“ Annexes (2)_ 

Horticulture. 

" Greenhouses (8) 

Machinery.... 

** Annex. 

“ Power House... 

“ Pumping Works 

“ Machine Shop.. 


7S7x 1.68, 
262x262 
350x700 
845x690 
256x960 
425x900 
199x388 
820x500 
120X200 
165x365 
135 diam. 
2 0x998 
24x100 
492x846 
490x 550 
100x461 , 
77x 84 ■ | 
146x250) I 


Area In 
Acres, j 

30.5 

1.6 

5.6 
5.5 
5.6) 
8.8 \ 
1.8 

3.7 > 

i.i 5 

1.4 ; 
- 8 *| 

5 :l\ 


Cost, 


BUILDIXGS. 


2.1 


*1,500.000 Agriculture. 

435.0.0 “ Annex. 

265.000 « “ Asse’y Hall, etc. 
401,000 Forestry... 

138,000 Live Stock (3).: 

:: 13 “ 

soo.Ooo 

25,000 

1 too non P- s - Government. 

i,„uu,wu imitation Battleship 

Illinois State. 

85,0C0i “ Wings (2). 


Dimen¬ 
sions in 
feet. 

500x800 

300x550 

125x450 

208x528 

125x300 

100x200 

65x200 

280x440 


Area in 
Acres. 


Cost. 


120x250 

120x250 


345x415 

69.25x348 

160x450 


9-2 i 
3.8 J 
1.3 
2.5 
.9 
.'5. 

40. 5 
.7 I 

•?{ I 


618,000 

100.000 

100,000 

33.000 

80,000 

335,000 

* 210,000 


153.8 

3.3 

.3 


*7,041.000 

400,000 

100,000 

250,500 


159.4 37,791.(1 o 


* Including connecting peristyle. 

The last three were erected—the first two by the 
United States Government, and the third by the State of 
111 inois. The visitor, however, will naturally class them 
among the great Exposition structures. 

1 he Exposition buildings, not including those of the 
Government and Illinois, have also a total gallery area of 
45-9 acres, thus making their total floor space 199.7 acres. 
The Fine Arts building has 7,885 lineal feet, or 145,852 
square feet of wall space. 

All of the annexes will be scarcely less imposing and 
architecturally beautiful than the main buildings themselves. 

1 he livestock sheds, which will cover an immense area as 
indicated, are constructed as inexpensively as possible 
without marring the general architectural effect. The power 
houses, pumping works, etc., are exhibits in themselves, 
and so constructed as to be readily inspected by visitors. 

1 here will be several Exposition buildings in addition to 
those named, but data concerning them are not yet fully 
determined. Among them will be a Press building, in which 
every possible convenience and accommodation for the press 
representatives of the world will be provided; and a repro¬ 
duction of the Spanish convent, Ea Rabida, in which a 
wonderfully complete collection of Columbus relics and 
allied exhibits will be gathered. The total cost of the 
Expositition structures alone is estimated at $8,000,000. 

MONEY IS NOT BEING SPARED. 

The amount ($8,000,000) which the Exposition Company 
expects to expend upon buildings represents less than one- 
half of its total estimated expenditure for the great enter¬ 
prise. hollowing are estimates of various other expenses 
prepared by the Grounds and Building Committee: 

Grading, filling, etc......$ 450,400 

Landscape gardening..... 303 400 

Viaducts and bridges........ Us’ooo 

Hera.______ 70000 

Waterway improvements_ _ 99-,’nnn 

Railways. --- EEEEEEIEEEI 

Steam plant........ 800 ,000 

Electricity.... 1 500000 

Statuary on buildings___ 100 000 

Vases, lamps, and posts....' ’ 50 000 

8,000 


Seating.. 

Water supply, sewerage, etc. 
Improvement of lake t'ront. 
World’s Congress Auxiliary. 


600,000 

200,000 

200,000 


Construction department expenses, fuel,etc.EEEE 520000 

Organization and administration.. 3 308*563 

Operating expenses during Exposition. SEES 1 ,550,000 

$10,530,453 

Add to this the amount for buildings ($8,000,000) and 
the gtand total sum to be expended by the Exposition 
Company stands at $18,530,453. This does not include, of 
course, the expenditure by the United States Government, 
me States of the Union, or foreign countries. Of this 
4 51 8,530,453, about $17,000,000 must be paid out before the 
gates of the Exposition are thrown open to the public on 
May 1, 1893. 

THE WORLD’S CONGRESS AUXILIARY. 

This constitutes the intellectual and moral branch of 
the Exposition Its motto is, “Not Matter, but Mind,” and 
it is organized to provide lor the presentation, by papers 
addresses ahd discussion, of the mental and moral status 


and achievements of the human race. Under its auspices a 
series of congresses will be held in Chicago during the pro¬ 
gress of the Exposition, in which, it is already assured, will 
participate a great many of the ablest living representatives 
in the various fields of intellectual effort and moral 
endeavor. The Auxiliary embraces between fifteen and 
twenty main Departments, such as Literature, Government 
Education, Music, Science, Art, Engineering, etc., in each of 
which are subdivisions. A programme is being arranged 
for congresses in each of these Departments and divisions, 
in which specialists and advanced thinkers may participate 
in discussing the vital and important questions, and present¬ 
ing the best and latest achievements of the human mind in 
each. During the Exposition the Auxiliary will have the 
use of a magnificent permanent Art Palace, which the Chi¬ 
cago Art Institute, aided by the Exposition Directory, is 
about .erecting on the lake front. This will have two large 
audience rooms, each of 3,500 capacity, and from twenty to 
thirty smaller rooms, of capacity ranging from 300 to 750. 
The great Auditorium will also be utilized for the larger 
congresses, and numerous other halls are available when 
required. Each congress will be supervised by a committee 
of persons actively interested in its particular field, accept¬ 
ance of such responsibility having already been given. The 
prospects are that fully 100 congresses altogether will be 
held. It is the intention to publish their proceedings in 
enduring form. Detailed information concerning the Aux¬ 
iliary, or any of its Departments or divisions, can be 
obtained of its president, Charles C. Bonney. 

THE BOARD OF LADY MANAGERS. 

The participation of women in the Exposition promises 
to be one of its most interesting as well as novel features. 
With a commodious and imposing building, designed by a 
young lady architect, and with an abundance of money, and 
with full recognition, indorsement, and aid by the United 
States Government and the Exposition Directory, the 
women have an opportunity of showing in most signal man¬ 
ner, the condition of their sex throughout the world, what 
are the achievements of woman in the various branches of 
human endeavor, and what is her adaptability to different 
occupations and lines of industrial and charitable work. 
Under the direction of the Board’s president,—Mrs. Potter 
Palmer,—the work of organization, and of enlisting the 
interest of women throughout the United States, and in 
foreign countries, has progressed to a most satisfactory stage. 

TRANSPORTATION MATTERS. 

. Transportation to and from the Exposition, both for 
visitors and exhibits, will be as perfect as it is possible to 
make it, both in the matter of facilities and rates. Greatly 
reduced rates on all railroads and some of the steamship 
lines will prevail. Definite arrangements are yet to be per¬ 
fected. . Much attention is being given to the question of 
furnishing abundant facilities for reaching the grounds from 
all parts of C hicago, and it can be asserted that existing 
means, already extensive, will be increased so that a maxi¬ 
s ' 11111 of 400,000 a day can be carried to and from the grounds, 
r or the transportation of exhibits, arrangements have 
already been made with nearly 500 railway and steamship 
lines, including all of the trunk railroads and more important 
lines in the United' States. Of these transportation lines 
417 have agreed to charge regular tariff rates on exhibits to 
the Exposition, and to return them to starting points free of 
charge, providing their ownership remains unchanged. 

1 hirty-seven have agreed to charge half regular rates both 
ways, and thirty-three have promised to transport them free 
both to and from the Exposition. The Atlantic Transport 
one or Steamers, which runs freight steamships between 
London and New York, Philadelphia and Baltimore, will 
make no charge on exhibits in either direction, except on 
such as, owing to their, excessive size or weight, require 
exti a help in their handling. In such cases, only the expense 
or the extia help will be charged. Foreign exhibits will be 
admitted free of all duty. Such exhibits, however, if sold in 

this country, will be subject to payment of regular customs 
duties. 


12 













































































TABLE SHOWING THE 

Populations and Distances from Chicago, 


Of all Cities in the United States and Canada, of 9,000 and upwards. 


ALABAMA.. 

Birmingham.. 

Mobile--».. 

Montgomery. 

ARIZONA___ 

ARKANSAS_ 

Ft. Smith_ 

Hot Springs. _ 

Little Rock_ 

Pine Blul'f.. 

CALIFORNIA_ 

Los Angeles_ 

Sacramento. 

San Diego_ 

San Francisco. 

San -Jose.. 

Santa Rosa. 

COLORADO. 

Denver. 

Leadville. 

Pueblo.. 

DELAWARE. 

Wilmington... 

CONNECTICUT. 

Bridgeport.. 

Danbury. 

Greenwich.... 

Hartford.. 

Manchester. 

Meriden. 

Middletown. 

New Britain_ 

New Haven__ 

New London. 

Norwalk. 

Norwich. 

Stamford. 

Vernon. 

Waterbury_ 

Windham. 

WASHINGTON, D. (' 

FLORIDA. 

Jacksonville_ 

Key West. 

Pensacola.. 

GEORGIA.... 

Athens_. 

Atlanta.. 

Augusta. 

Brunswick. 

Columbus.. 

Macon.. 

Savannah- 

IDAHO. ------ 

Boise City_ 

ILLINOIS. 

Alton. 

Aurora. 

Belleville.. 

Bloomington. 

Cairo.. 

Chicago.. 

Danville. 

Decatur. 

East St. Louis- 

Elgin. 

Freeport. 

Galesburg_ 

Jacksonville.- 

Joliet.. 

Moline. 

Ottawa. 

Peoria. 

Quincy. 


Population. Dlst. from 
Chicago. 


1,513,017 


26,178 

7S4 

31,076 

827 

21,883 

812 

59,620 


1.128,179 


11,311 

698 

8,080 

696 

25,874 

628 

9,952 

633 

1,208,130 


50,395 

2,712 

. 26,386 

2,267 

16,159 

2,347 

. 298,997 

2,357 

18,060 

2,309 

5,220 

2,409 

412,198 

* 

106,713 

1,127 

10,3S4 

1,278 

24,558 

1,092 

168,493 


01,431 

845 

740,258 


48,866 

908 

16,552 

972 

10,131 

940 

53,230 

1,035 

8.222 

1,043 

21,652 

1,008 

9,012 

978 

19,007 

1,020 

81,298 

1,049 

13,757 

1,030 

17,749 

953 

10,150 

1,003 

15,700 

945 


Rockford. 

Rock Island .. 

Springfield_ 

Streator.. 

INDIANA. 

Anderson. 

Elkhart. 

Evansville_ 

Fort Wayne.. 
Indianapolis.. 
Jeffersonville. 

Kokomo. 

Lafayette. 

Logansport... 

Madison. 

Marion. 

Michigan City 

Muncie. 

New Albany. . 
Richmond 
South Bend... 
Terre Haute.. 
Vincennes.... 

IOWA. 

Burlington... 
Cedar Rapids. 

Clinton_ 

Council Bluffs 

Davenport_ 

Des Moines... 

Dubuque. 

Keokuk. 

Marshalltown. 
Muscatine.... 

Ottumwa. 

Sioux City 
KANSAS. 


Population. Dist. from 
Chicago. 

... 23,584 93 

... 13,632 

194 

... 24,963 

185 

... 11,414 

94 

.. .2,192,404 


... 10,741 

180 

... ir,360 

101 

_ 50,756 

284 

... 35,393 

148 

... 105,436 

183 

... 10,666 

322 

8,261 

140 

... 10,243 

134 

... 13,328 

117 

8,936 

269 

8,769 

157 

... • 10,774 

58 

... 11,345 

219 

... 21,059 

317 

... 16,008 

229 

... 21,819 

80 

... 30,217 

178 

8,853 

235 

... 1,911,890 


... 22,565 

206 

... 18,020 

249 

... 13,619 

138 

... 21,474 

490 

... 28,872 

624 

... 50,093 

303 

... 30,311 

199 

... 14,101 

184 

8,914 

320 

. .. 11,454 

211 

... 13,619 

281 

... 37,800 

-- .1,427,090 

327 


8,808 
. 28,640 

. 10,022 
. 230,392 
. 391,422 
. 17,201 

. 18,0S0 

. 11,750 

.1,837,353 
8,629 
. 05,533 

. 33,300 

8,459 
. 17,303 


1,047 

1,002 

1,013 

811 

1,030 

1,474 

974 

895 

794 

965 

1,065 

997 


Arkansas City. 8,347 737 

Atchison. 13,963 490 

Ft. Scott. 11,940 534 

Hutchinson. 8,682 693 

Kansas City. 38,316 48S 

Lawrence . 9,997 499 

Leavenworth.. 19,768 577 

Topeka.... 31,007 555 

Wichita.. 23,853 686 

KENTUCKY . .1,858,635 

Covington. 37,371 307 

Henderson... 8,835 299 

Lexington. 21,567 384 

Louisville. 161,129 322 


22,740 

897 

Newport _ 

. 24,918 

300 

43,189 

1,089 

Owensborough.... 

_ 9,837 

329 

84,385 


Paducah_ 

_ 12,797 

381 

2,311 

1,874 

LOUISIANA_ 

_1,118,589 


,820,35 V 


Baton Rouge_ 

_ 10.478 

910 

10,294 

257 

New Orleans_ 

.. 242,039 

915 

19,688 

45 

Shreveport - 

.. 11,979 

815 

15,361 

299 

MAINE_ 

. 661,086 


20,4S4 

126 

Auburn _ 

- 11,250 

1,214 

10,324 

360 

Augusta_ __ 

-- 10,527 

1,200 

,099,850 


Bangor - 

_ 19,103 

1,274 

11,491 

124 

Bath _ 

. 8,723 

1,176 

10,841 

1S4 

Bideford _ 

- 14,443 

1,115 

15,109 

284 

Lewiston -- 

.. 21,701 

1,187 

17,823 

37 

Portland - 


1*152 

10,189 

114 

Rockland.. ... 

.. 8,174 

1,224 

15,264 

163 

MASSACHUSETTS _ 

_2,238,943 


12,935 

215 

Adams .- -. 

. 2,213 

880 

23,264 

41 

Amesbury. 

... 9,798 

1,059 

12,000 

170 

Beverly. 

.. 10,821 

1,034 

9,985 

84 

Boston... 

...._ 448 447 

1,016 

41,024 

161 

Brocton.... 

. 27.294 

1,036 

31,494 

202 

Brookline..... 

. 12,103. 

1,019 


Population, nut. from 
Chicago. 


Cambridge.. 

. 70.02S 

1,020 

Chelsea__ 

. 27,909 

1,018 

Chicopee.. 

_ 14,050 

923 

Clinton_ 

_ 10,424 

1,041 

Everett.... 

. 11,008 

1,019 

Fall River_ 

. 74,398 

1,024 

Fitchburg_ 

. 22,037 

978 

Framingham____ 

9 239 

1,051 

Gardner- 

_ 8,424 

988- 

Gloucester.. 

_ 24,651 

1,047 

Haverhill.. _ 

_ 27,412 

1;049 

Holyoke__ 

. 35,037 

926 

Hyde Park_ 

. 10,193 

1,020 

Lawrence___ 

.. 44.654 

1,044 

Lowell....'_ 

. 77,696 

1,042 

Lynn___ 

. 55,727 

1,025 

Malden____ 

.. 23,031 

1,021 

Marblehead_ 

. 8,202 

1,033 

Marlborough__ 

_ 13,805 

1,102 

Medford____ 

_ 11,079 

1,021 

Melrose.. 

_ 8,519 

1,023 

Milford_ 

8,780 

1,066 

Natick__ 

_ 9,118 

1,001 

Neiv Bedford.. 

_ 40,733 

1,029 

Newton-- 

_ 24,379 

1,009 

Newburyport.. 

_ 13,947 

1,053 

North Adams.. 

. 16,074 

875 

Northampton.. 

_ r . 14,990 

908 

Peabody.. 

_ 10,158 

1,039 

Pittsfield__;. 

.. 17,281 

865 

Quincy ...__ 

_ 10,723 

1,025 

Salem__ 

. 30,801 

1,041 

Somerville__ 

. 40,152 

1,018 

Spencer. 

. 8,747 

946 

Springfield.___ 

_ 44,179 

918 

Taunton... 

_ 25,448 

1,050 

Waltham. . 

. 18,707 

1,026 

Westfield. . 

.. 9,805 

880 

Weymouth... 

. 10,806 

1,031 

Woburn ___ 

_ 13,499 

1,020 

Worcester__ 

_ 84,665 

972 

M VRYLAND...__ 

_1,042,390 


Baltimore___ 

_ 434,439 

853 

Cumberland__ 

. 12,729 

401 

Frederick___. 

.. 8,193 

795 

Hagerstown ...... 

. 10,118 

7<>:> 

MICHIGAN__ 

_2,093,889 


Adrian_ 

_ 8,756 

211 

Alpena... 

_ 11,283 

552 

Ann Arbor. . 

... 9,431 

248 

Battle Creek_ 

_ 13,197 

165 

Bay City.... 

_ 27,839 

354 

Detroit_ 

. 205,876 

296 

Flint_ 

_ 9,803 

209 

Grand Rapids.___ 

_ 60,278 

183 

Ishpeming_ 

.. 11,197 

392 

Jackson... 

.. 20,708 

210 

Kalamazoo ___ 

_ 17,853 

142 

Lansing- 

_ 13,102 

247 

Manistee- 

_ 12,812 

296 

Marquette_ 

_ 9,093 

401 

“Menominee.. 

_ 10,630 

238 

Muskegon_ 

_ 22,702 

108 

Port Huron.... 

_ 13 543 

335 

Saginaw.... 

_ 40,322 

310 

West Bay City.. 

.. 12,981 

355 

MINNESOTA.. 

_1,301,826 


Duluth--- 

.. 33,115 

554 

Minneapolis... 

.. 104,738 

420 

Mankato___ 

. 8,838 

432 

St. Paul___ 

. 133,156 

409 

Stillwater... 

_ 11,260 

415 

Winona. 

. 18,208 

306 

MISSISSIPPI__ ... 

_1,289,600 


Meridian.... 

_ 10,624 

937 

Vicksburg.... 

. 13,373 

776 


13 












































































































































































































































MISSOURI. 

Hannibal. 

Joplin. 

Kansas City —: - 

Moberly. 

Sedalia- - — 

Springtield. 

St. Joseph. 

St. Louis.. 

MONTANA—. 

Butte City. 

Helena. 

NEBRASKA . 

Beatrice -- 

Hastings. 

Lincoln -. 

Nebraska City... 

Omaha. 

Plattsmouth. 

South Omaha.... 

NEVADA . 

NEW HAMPSHIRE 

Concord.. 

Dover. 

Manchester. 

Nashua. 

Portsmouth. 

NEW JERSEY.. 

Atlantic City- 

Bridgetown A- 

Burlington. 

Camden. 

Elizabeth. 

Harrison. 

Hoboken. 

Jersey City. 

NEW MEXICO. 

Las Vegas.. 

Santa Fe. 

NEW YORK. 

Albany. 

Amsterdam.. 

Auburn. 

Binghampton.... 

Brooklyn. 

Buffalo. 

Cohoes. 

Corning. 

Dunkirk. 

Elmira .. 

Flushing. 

Gloversville. 

; Hempstead. 

Hornellsville. 

Hudson. 

Huntington...... 

Islip. 

Ithaca . 

Jamaica. 

Jamestown.. 

Kingston. 

Lansingburgh_ 

Lockport. 

Long Island. 

Middletown .•. 

New Brighton_ 

Newburgh. 

Newtown. 

New York City... 

Ogdensburgh . 

Oswego. 

Oyster Bay. 

Peekskill. 

Poughkeepsie. 

Rochester. 

Rome. 

Saratoga Springs. . 

Schenectady. 

South Hampton... 

Syracuse...’... 

Troy. 

Utica. 


Population. 


IMst. from 
Chicago. 


Population. 


.2,679,184 
12,857 
9,943 
. 132,716 
8,206 
. 14,068 

. 21,850 

. 52,324 

. 451,770 
. 132,159 
. 10,723 

. 13,834 

.1,058,910 
. 13,836 

. 13,584 

. 55,154 

. 11,494 

. 140,452 
8,392 
8,062 
. 45,761 

. 376,530 
. 17,004 

. 12,790 

. 44,126 

. 19,311 

9,827 
. 1,444,933 
.. 13,055 
.. 11,424 


281 

555 

488 

351 

460 

521 

469 

283 

1,654 

1,582 

627 

644 

547 

502 

493 

487 

495 


1,072 

1,103 

1,118 

1,037 

1,092 

881 

860 


Watertown.. ’ 

West Troy. 12 ’ 9 ^ 

Yonkers. 82 ’ 033 

NORTH CAROLINA.-.I. 617)94 ‘ 

Asheville. l0,2 ‘^ 

Charlotte. 11)537 

Raleigh. 12)6 ‘ 8 

■Wilmington. 20,0u0 

NORTH DAKOTA. I 82 - 719 

Bismarck. i . 2)186 

OHIO..3,672,316 

Akron. 27)601 

Ashtabula. 8)887 

Bellaire..- 0)984 

Canton. 26,189 

Chillicothe. 11,2SS 

Cincinnati. 296,908 

Cleveland. 261,353 

Columbus. 88,150 

Dayton... 61,220 

Delaware.. 8 > 224 

East Liverpool.- - - 10,956 

Findlay. 18,553 

Hamilton. 17,565 

Ironton. 10,939 

Lima... 15,981 

Lancaster. 7 » 55,Pi 

Mansfield...- 13,473 

Marietta. 8 - 278 

Marion.- 8 >327 


Dlst. from 
Chicago. 

724 
834 
961 


796 

956 

1,070 

1,143 

854 

345 

411 

465 

367 

464 

866 

357 

814 

265 

289 

460 

232 

267 
427 
208 
846 
294 
575 

268 
359 


. 58,313 

823 

Newark. 

__ 14,270 

359 

37 764 

898 

Pinna, _ 

. 9,090 

241 

8 338 

904 

Portsmouth __ 

.. 12,394 

472 

. 43,648 

911 

Sandusky. 

.. 18,471 

292 

163,003 

911 

Springfield... 

.. 31,895 

301 

153,593 


Steubenville. 

. 13,394 

464 

2,585 

1,244 

Tiffin 

... 10,801 

246 

6,185 

1,327 

Toledo . 

. 81,434 

243 

5,997,853 


Xenia... 

7,301 

281 

94,923 

833 

Youngstown. 

___ 33,220 

422 

17,336 

800 

Zanesville_ 

... 21,009 

383 

25,858 

681 

OREGON .. 

.. 313,767 


35,005 

755 

East Portland. 

.. 10,532 

2,296 

806,341 

912 

Portland.. 

. 46,385 

2,296 

255,664 

536 

PENNSYLVANIA .... 

__5,25S,014 


22,509 

837 

Allegheny City. 

... 105,287 

467 

8,550 

688 

Allentown.. 

.. 25,228 

807 

9,416 

500 

Altoona__ 

. 30,337 

5S5 

30,893 

696 

Beaver Falls.. 

. 9,735 

438 

8,436 

937 

Bradford _ 

.. 10,514 

629 

13,864 

799 

Braddoek... 

8,561 

470 

4,831 

932 

Butler__ 

. 8,734 

498 

10,996 

628 

Carbondale.. 

.. 10,823 

782 

9,970 

862 

Carlisle. 

. 7,620 

736 

3,028 

947 

Chambersburgh_ 

. 7,863 

769 

8,783 

955 

Chester.... 

--- 20,226 

825 

11,079 

695 

Columbia_ 

-... 10,599 

727 

5,361 

922 

Danville.. 

..- 7,998 

757 

16,038 

665 

Dunmore_ 

8,315 

802 

21,261 

916 

Easton____ 

- 14,481 

827 

10,550 

866 

Erie___ 

.. 40,634 

451 

16,038 

563 

Harrisburgh_ 

--.... 39,385 

717 

30,506 

913 

Hazleton.. 

- 11,872 

777 

11,977 

925 

Johnstown. 

.. 21,805 

547 

16,423 

922 

Lancaster. 

.. 32,011 

754 

23,087 

924 

Lebanon.. 

... 14,664 

743 

17,549 

918 

McKeesport. 

- 20,741 

483 

L ,513,301 

912 

Mahan oy City.... 

.. 11,286 

739 

11,662 

792 

Meadville. 

9,520 

371 

21,842 

677 

Mount Carmel_ 

8,254 

787 

13,870 - 

935 

Nanticoke_ 

. 10,044 

797 

9,676 

934 

New Castle.. 

- 11,600 

559 

22,206 

903 

Norristown_ 

-- 19,791 

832 

133,896 

605 

Oil City.... 

.. 10,932 

601 

14,991 

724 

Philadelphia_ 

-1,046,964 

822 

11,975 

856 

Phoenix vi lie.. 

..- 8,514 

850 

.19,902 

816 

Plymouth__ 

9,344 

781 

8,200 

1,002 

Pittsburgh___ 

. 238,617 

468 

88,143 

6 S 6 

Pittstown__ 

.. 10,302 

827 

60,956 

833 

Pottstown_ 

--- 13,285 

862 

44,007 


Pottsville.. 

. 14,117 

895 




Reading. 

Scranton. 

Shamokin. 

Shenandoah . 

South Bethlehem .. 

Steelton.. 

Titusville. 

Wilkes Ban e. 

Williamsport.. 

York.. 

RHODE ISLAND. 

Newport. 

Pawtucket. 

Providence. 

Woonsocket. 

SOUTH CAROLINA 

Charleston. 

Columbia. 

Greenville. 

SOUTH DAKOTA... 

Sioux Falls- 

Deadwood. 

TENNESSEE. 

Clarksville. 

Chattanooga. 

Jackson . 

Knoxville. 

Memphis. 

Nashville.. 

TEXAS. 

Austin. 

Dallas-.... 

Dennison. 

El Paso. 

Fort Worth.. 

Galveston. 

Houston. 

Laredo. 

Paris. 

Waco. 

San Antonio_ 

UTAH. 

Ogden. 

Salt Lake City_ 

VERMONT. 

Burlington .. 

Rutland. 

VIRGINIA. 

Alexandria.. 

Danville. 

Lynchburgh. 

Manchester- 

Norfolk. 

Petersburgh. 

Portsmouth. 

Richmond. 

Roanoke. 

WASHINGTON. 

Seattle... 

Spokane Falls .... 
Tacoma. 

WEST VIRGINIA.. . 

Huntington. 

Parkersburg. 

Wheeling. 

WISCONSIN. 

Appleton. 

Ashland... 

Chippewa Falls... 

Eau Claire. 

Fond du Lac. 

Green Bay. 

Janesville. 

La Crosse. 

Madison. 

Marinette.. 

Milwaukee.. 

Oshkosh. 

Racine.. 

Sheboygan. 

Superior.. 

Watertown. 

Wausau. 

WYOMING.. 

Cheyenne. 

CANADA. 

Halifax. 

Hamilton. 

London. 

Montreal. 

Ottawa. 

Quebec. 

St. Catherines. 

Toronto. 

Vancouver. 

Victoria, B.C..... 
Winnipeg... 


Population. Dist. from 

Chicago. 

... 58,661 

761 


801 

... 14,403 

779 

... 15,944 

742 

. - - 10,302 

817 

9,250 

720 

8,073 

619 

... 37,718 

803 

... 27,132 

800 

... 20,793 

918 

... 345,506 

... 19,457 

1,116 

1,123 

. -. 27,633 

... 132,146 

1,120 

... 20,830 

l,0o4 

—1,151,149 

... 54,955 

1,132 

... 15,353 

1,012 

8,607 

906 

... .328,808. 

... 10,177 

596 

2,366 

1,125 

... 1,767,518 

7,923 

435 

... 29,100 

642 

... 10,039 

474 

... 22,535 

663 

... 64,495 

544 

... 76,168 

444 

... 2,235,523 

... 14,575 

1,172 

... 38,007 

963 

... 10,958 

857 

... 10,338 

1568 

... 23,076 

952 

... 29,084 

1,296 

... 27,557 

1,241 

... 11,319 

1.386 

8,254 

867 


1,020 

... 37,673 

1,222 

... 207,905 

... 14.889 

1,523 

... 44,843 

1,561 

... 332,422 

... 14,590 

954 

... 11,760 

913 


. -. 14,339 

881 

... 10,305 

806 

... 19,709 

860 

9,240 

930 

.... 34,871 

l,0u2 

... 22,680 

920 

.... 13.268 

1,002 

... 81.388 

927 

.... 16,159 

725 

.... 349.390 

42,837 

2,318 

... 19,922 

1,921 

.... 36,006 

2,318 

... 762,794 

... 10,108 

527 

_ 8,408 

510 

... 34,522 

460 

....1,686,880 

... 11,869 

185 

9,956 

483 

8,670 

331 

... 17,415 

321 

... 12.024 

148 

9,069 

198 

.... 10,836 

91 

.... 25,090 

276 

.... 13,426 

139 

.... 11,523 

262 


85 


165 


61 

.... 16.350 

191 


* 546 

130 


295 

.... 60,705 


1,036 


1,410 


482 


406 


855 


740 


1.057 


514 


513 


2,100 


2,460 


S94 


14 





















































































































































































































































































Texas 


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GROUND PLAN OF THB COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION. 


15 
















































































































































































































































































































































































































* 



The Illinois State Building. 


The Illinois Building at the World’s Columbian Exposition is by far the most pretentious of those erected by the several 
States of the Union. Being in a sense the host at the Exposition, it was deemed not only proper but requisite that Illinois 
should make such appropriation and provide such a building as would enable her to perform creditably the duties of that 
office. The State appropriated $800,000. 


Situated on a high terrace, in one of the most favored spots in Jackson Park, the Illinois Building commands, for nearly 
a mile to the Southward, a view of the beautiful waterway which encircles the great island and extends to the buildings for 
Electricity and Mines, while to the northward, across a branch of the lagoon, is presented the imposing facade of the Palace 
of Fine Arts. 


The building in the main is 160 feet wide by 450 feet long. On the north, Memorial Hall forms a wing 50 by 75 feet, 
and on the south another wing 75 by 123 feet, and three stories high, accommodates the executive offices, and in the third 
story, two public halls The side walls are 47 feet high, while the south wing is 72 feet and the ends 54 feet. Surmounting 
the building at the center, a fine dome, 72 feet in diameter, rises to a height of 235 feet. The building is constructed almost 
wholly of Illinois material—wood, stone, brick and steel—and is covered with “staff” artistically treated. The grand en¬ 
trance faces the waterway to the south, while at the west and north ends are others scarcely less imposing. In front of the 
entrances are beautiful terraces with balustrades, statutes, fountains, flowers, and stone steps leading down to the roadways 
and lagoon landings. 


The building is embellished with fine carvings and statuary. It is thoroughly lighted, first from the side windows, which 
are placed about fourteen feet above the floor 10 permit cases to be placed against the walls; second, with skylights placed 
in the flac roof of the side aisles; and third, with continuous skylights on the ridge of a pitched roof or nave. Ventilation is 
provided for through windows placed a story above the flat aisle roof and the foot of the sloping roof over the nave. The 
interior of the structure is appropriately and beautifully ornamented. 


Memorial Hall, which is fire-proof, has a gallery encircling it, and contains a large and interesting collection of relics 
and trophies of the war and other periods, all owned by the State. 

One feature of the Illinois Building which is sure to attract much attention, consists of five model co'mmon school rooms, 
of high grade, fully equipped and furnished under the direction of the State Superintendent of Public Instruction. There 
may be seen an illustration of the methods and results of educational work. 

The Illinois building was designed by W. W. Boyington & Co., Chicago, and cost $250,000. 
















































































































































The Woman’s Building. 


Among a great number of sketches submitted in competition for this building by women from all over the land, the 
President of the Board of Lady Managers quickly discovered in the sketch submitted by Miss Sophia G. Hayden that 
harmony of grouping and gracefulness of details which indicate the architectural scholar, and to her was awarded the first 
prize of a thousand dollars, and also the execution of the design. 

Directly in front of the building theJagoon takes the form of a bay, about 400 feet in width. From the center of this 
bay a grand landing and staircase leads to a terrace six feet above the water. Crossing this terrace other staircases give 
access to the ground four feet above, on which, about 100 feet back, the building is situated. The first terrace is designed 
in artistic flower beds and low shrubs. The principal facade has an extreme length of 400 feet, the depth of the building 
being half this distance. Italian renaissance is the style selected. 

The first story is raised about ten feet from the ground line, and a wide staircase leads to the center pavilion. This 
pavilion, forming the main tripple-arched entrance, with an open colonnade in the second story, is finished with a low 
pediment enriched with a highly elaborate bas-relief. The corner pavilions have each an open colonnade added above 
the main cornice. Here are located the Hanging Gardens. 

A lobby 40 feet wide leads into the open .rotunda, 70x65 feet, reaching through the height of the building, and pro¬ 
tected by a richly ornamented sky-light. This rotunda is surrounded by a two-story open arcade, as delicate and* chaste in 
design as the exterior, the whole having a thoroughly Italian court-yard effect, admitting abundance of light to all rooms 
facing this interior space. On the first floor are located, on the left hand, a model hospital; on the right, a model kinder¬ 
garten; each occupying 80x60 feet. 

The whole floor of the south pavilion is devoted to the retrospective exhibit; the one on the north to reform work and 
charity organization. Each of these floors is 80x200 feet. The curtain opposite the main front contains the Library, 
Bureau of Information, records, etc. 

In the second story are located ladies’ parlors, committee-rooms and dressing-rooms, all leading to the open bacony 
in front. The whole second floor of the north pavilion incloses the great assembly-room and club-room. The first of 
these is provided with an elevated stage for the accommodation of speakers. The south pavilion contains the model 
kitchen, refreshment rooms, reception rooms, etc. 

The building is encased with “staff,” the same material used on the rest of the buildings, anti as it stands with its 
mellow, decorated walls bathed in the bright sunshine, the women of the country are justly proud of the result. 


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The Electrical Building;. 


The Electrical Building, the seat of perhaps the most novel and brilliant exhibit in the whole Exposition, is 345 feet 
wide and 700 feet long, the major axis running north and south. The south front is on the great Quadrangle 01; Court; 
the north front faces the lagoon; the east front is opposite the Manufactures Building, and the west faces the Mines Build¬ 
ing. 

The general scheme of the plan is based upon a longitudinal nave 115 feet wide and 114 feet high, crossed in the mid¬ 
dle by a transept of the same width and height. The nave and the transept have a pitched roof, with a range of sky¬ 
lights at the bottom of the pitch, and clearstory windows. The rest of the building is covered with a flat roof, averaging 
62 feet in height, and provided with skylights. 

The second story is composed of a series of galleries connected across the nave by two bridges, with access by four 
grand staircases. The area of the galleries in the second story is 118,546 square feet, or 2.7 acres. 

The exterior walls of this building are composed of a continuous Corinthian order of pilasters, 3 feet 6 inches wide 
and 42 feet high, supporting a full entablature, and resting upon a stylobate 8 feet 6 inches. The total height of the walls 
from the grade outside is 68 feet 6 inches. 

At each of the four corners of the building there is a pavilion, above which rises a light open spire or tower 169 feet 
high. Intermediate between these corner pavilions and the central pavilions on the east and west sides, there is a subor- 
dinate pavilion bearing a low square dome upon an open lantern. 

✓ 

The Electricity Building has an open portico extending along the whole of the south facade, the lower or Ionic order 
forming an open screen in front of it. The various subordinate pavilions are. treated with windows and balconies. The 
details of the exterior orders are richly decorated, and the pediments, friezes, panels and spandrils have received a decor¬ 
ation of figures in relief, with architectural motifs, the general tendency of which is to illustrate the purposes of the 
building. 

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The appearance of the exterior is that of marble, but the walls of the hemicycle and of the various porticos and loggia 
are highly enriched with color, the pilasters in these places being decorated with scaghola, and the capitals with metallic 
effects in bronze. 

Van Brunt & Howe, of Kansas City, are the architects. The cost is $375,000. 

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The Horticultural Building. 

Immediately south of the entrance to Jackson Park from the Midway Plaisance, and facing east on che lagoon, is the 
Horticultural Building. In front is a flower terrace for outside exhibits, including tanks for Nymphaea and the Victoria 
Regia. The front of the terrace, with its low parapet between large vases, borders the water, and at its center forms 
a boat landing. 

The building is 1,000 feet long, with an extreme width of 250 feet. The plan is a central pavilion with two end 
pavilions, each connected with the central one by front and rear curtains, forming two interior courts, each 88 by 270 feet 
These courts are beautifully decorated in color and planted with oramental shrubs and flowers. The center of the pavilion 
is roofed by a crystal dome 187 feet in diameter and 113 feet high, under which are exhibited the tallest palms, bamboos 
and tree ferns that can be procured. There are galleries in each of the pavilions. The galleries of the end pavilions are 
designed for cafes, the situation and surrounding being particularly adapted to recreation and refreshment. These cafes 
are surrounded by an arcade on three sides from which charming views of the grounds can be obtained. 

In this building are exhibited all the varieties of flowers, plants, vines, seeds, horticultural implements, etc. Those 
exhibits requiring sunshine and light are shown in the rear curtains, where the roof is entirely of glass and not coo far 
removed from the plants. The front curtains and space under the galleries are designed for exhibits that require only the 
ordinary amount of light. Provision is made to heat such parts as require it. 

The exterior of the building is in “ staff,” tinted in a soft warm buff, color being reserved forthe interiorand the courts. 

T he cost of this building was about $300,000. W. L. B. Jenny, of Chicago, is the architect. 


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The Hall of Mines and Mining. 


Located at the southern extremity of the western lagoon or lake, and between the Electricity and 1 ransportation 
Buildings, is the Mines and Mining Building. This building is 700 feet long by 350 feet wide, and the architect is S. S. 
Beman, of Chicago. Its architecture has its inspiration in early Italian renaissance, with which sufficient liberty is taken 
to invest the building with the animation that should characterize a great general Exposition. There is a decided French 
spirit pervading the exterior design, but it is kept well subordinated. In plan it is simple and straightforwaid, embrac¬ 
ing on the ground floor spacious vestibules, restaurants, toilet-rooms, etc. On each of the four sides of the building are 
placed the entrances, those of the north and south fronts being the most spacious and prominent. To the right and left of 
each entrance, inside, start broad flights of easy stairs leading to the galleries. I he galleries are 60 feet wide and 25 
feet high from the ground floor, and are lighted on the sides by large windows, and from above by a high clearstory 
extending around the building. 

The main fronts look southward on the great Central Court, and northward on the western and middle lakes and 
an island gorgeous with flowers. The principal fronts display enormous arched entrances, richly embelished with sculp¬ 
tural decorations emblamatic of Mining and its allied industries. At each end of these fronts are large square pavil¬ 
ions, surmounted by low domes, which mark the four corners of the building, and are lighted by large arched windows 
extending through the galleries. 

Between the main entrance and the pavilions are richly decorated arcades, forming an open loggia on the ground 
floor, and a deeply recessed promenade on the gallery floor level, which commands a fine view of the lakes and islands 
to the northward and the great Central Court on the south. These covered promenades are each 25 feet wide and 230 
feet long, and from them is had access to the building at numerous points. These loggias on the first floor are faced with 
marbles of different kinds and hues, which will be considered part of the Mining Exhibit, and so utilized as to have 
marketable value at the close of the Exposition. The loggia ceilings will be heavily colfered, and richly decorated in 
plaster and color. The ornamentation is massed at the prominent points of the facade. The exterior presents a mas¬ 
sive, though graceful, appearance. 


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Grecian-Ionic in style, the Fine Arts Building is a pure type of the most refined classic architecture, d he building 
is oblong, and is 500 by 320 feet, intersected north, east, south, and west by a great nave and transept 100 feet wide and 
70 feet high, at the intersection of which is a dome 60 feet in diameter. 1 he building is 125 feet to the top of the dome, 

which is surmounted by a colossal statue of the type of famous figure of Winged \ ictory. I he transept has a clear space 

the center of 60 feet, being lighted entirely from above. 

On either side are galleries 20 feet wide 24 feet above the floor. I he collections of the sculpture aie displayed on 

the main floor of the nave and transept, and on the walls both of the ground floor and ol the galleries aie ample at (.as 

for displaying the paintings and sculptured panels in relief. I he corners made by the crossing of the nave and tiansept 

* 

through are filled with small picture galleries. . 

Around the entire building are galleries 40 feet wide, forming a continuous promenade aiound the classic stiuctuie. 

Between the promenade and the naves are the smaller rooms devoted to private collections of paintings and the collec¬ 
tions of the various art schools. On either side of the main building, and connected with it by handsome corridois, aie 

very large annexes, which are also utilized by various art exhibits. 

The main building is entered by four great portals, richly ornamented with architectual sculpture, and approached 
by broad flights of steps. The walls of the loggia of the colonnades are highly decorated with mural paintings, illus¬ 
trating the history and progress of the arts. I he frieze of the exterior walls and the pediments of the principal entian- 
ces are ornamented with sculptures and portraits in bas-relief of the masters ol ancient ait. 

The general tone or color is light gray stone. 

The construction, although of a temporary character, is necessarily fire-proof. 1 he main walls aie of solid buck, 

covered with “staff,” architecturally ornamented, while the roof, floors, and galleries are of iron. 

All light is supplied through glass sky-lights in iron frames. 

The building is located beautifully in the northern portion of the park, with the south front facing the lagoon. It 
is separated from the lagoon by beautiful terraces, ornamented with balustrades, with an immense flight of steps leading 
down from the main portal to the lagoon, where there is a landing for boats. The north front faces the wide lawn and 
the group of State buildings. The immediate neighborhood of the building is ornamented with groups of statues, 
replica ornaments of classic art, such as the Choriagic monument, the Cave of the \\ inds, and other beautiful exam¬ 
ples of Grecian art. The ornamentation also includes statues of heroic and life-size proportions, 


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The Agricultural Building. 

One of the most magnificent structures raised for the Exposition is the Agricultural Building. The style of archi¬ 
tecture is classic renaissance. This building is put up very near the shore of Lake Michigan, and is almost surrounded 
by the lagoons that lead into the Park from the lake. The building is 500x800 feet, its longest dimensions being east 
and west. For a single story building the design is bold and heroic. The general cornice line is 65 feet above grade. 
On either side of the main entrance are mammoth Corinthian pillars, 50 feet high and 5 feet in diameter. On each 
corner and from the center of the building pavilions are reared, the center one being 144 feet square. The corner 
pavilions are connected by curtains, forming a continuous arcade around the top of the building. I he main entrance 
leads through an opening 64 feet wide into a vestibule, from which entrance is had to the rotunda, 100 feet in diameter. 
This is surmounted by a mammoth glass dome 130 feet high. All through the main vestibule statuary has been 
designed, illustrative of the Agricultural industry. Similar designs are grouped about all of the grand entrances in the 
most elaborate manner. The corner pavilions are surmounted by domes 96 feet high, and above these tower groups of 
statuary. The design for these domes is that of three female figures, of herculean proportions, supporting a mam¬ 
moth globe. 

To the southward of the Agricultural Building is a spacious structure devoted chiefly to a Live Stock and Agricul¬ 
tural Assembly Hall. This building is conveniently near one of the stations of the elevated railway. On the first floor, 
near the main entrance of the building, is located a bureau of information. This floor also contains suitable committee 
and other rooms for the different live stock associations. On this floor there are also large and handsomely equipped 
waiting-rooms. Broad stairways lead from the first floor into the Assembly-room, which has a seating capacity of about 
i,Soo. This Assembly-room furnishes facilities for lectures, delivered by gentlemen eminent in their special fields of 
work, embracing every interest connected with live stock, agriculture and allied industries. 


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The Government Building. 


Delightfully located near the Lake shore, south of the main lagoon and of the area reserved for the Foreign Nations 
and the several States, and east of the Women’s Building and of Midway Plaisance, is the Government Exhibit Build¬ 
ing. The buildings of England, Germany and Mexico are near by to the northward. The Government Building was 
designed by Architect Windriin. It is classic in style, and bears a strong resemblance to the National Museum and other 
Government buildings at Washington. It covers an area of 350 by 420 feet, is constructed of iron, brick and glass, and 
cost $400,000. Its leading architectural feature is a central octagonal dome 120 feet in diameter and 150 feet high, 
the floor of which will be kept free from exhibits. The building fronts to the west, and connects on the north, by a 
bridge over the lagoon, with the building of the Fisheries exhibit. 

The south half of the Government Building is devoted to the exhibits of the 

Post-Office Department, Treasury Department, War Depart¬ 
ment and Department of Agriculture. 

The north half is devoted to the exhibits of the Fisheries Commission, Smithsonian Institute, and Interior Department. 
The State Department exhibit extends from the rotunda to the east end, and that of the Department of Justice from 
the rotunda to the west end of the building. The allotment of space for the several department exhibits is: 

WAR DEPARTMENT, 23,000 SQUARE FEET; 

TREASURY, 10,500 SQUARE FEET; 

AGRICULTURE, 23,250 SQUARE FEET; 

INTERIOR, 24,000 SQUARE FEET; 

POST OFFICE, 9,000 SQUARE FEET, 

FISHERY, 20,000 SQUARE FEET; 

And SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTE, balance of space. 


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The Manufactures and Liberal Arts Building. 

Notable for its symmetrical proportions, the Manufactures and Liberal Arts Building is the mammoth structure of the 
Exposition. It measures 1,687 by 787 feet and covers nearly 31 acres, being the largest Exposition building ever construc¬ 
ted. Within the building a gallery 50 feet wide extends around all four sides, and projecting from this are 86 smaller 
galleries, 12 feet wide, from which visitors may survey the vast array of exhibits and the busy scene below. The galleries 
are approached upon the main floor by 30 great staircases, the flights of which are 12 feet wide each. “Columbia Avenue,” 
50 feet wide, extends through the mammoth building longitudinally and an avenue of like width crosses it at right angles 
at the center. The main roof is of iron and glass and arches an area 385 by 1400 feet and has its ridge 150 feet from the 
ground. The building, including its galleries, has about 40 acres of floor space. 

The Manufactures and Liberal Arts Building is in the Corinthian style of architecture, and in point of being severely 
classic excels nearly all of the other edifices. The long array of columns and arches, which its facades piesent, is relieved 
from monotony by very elaborate ornamentation. In this ornamentation female figures, symbolical of the various arts 

and sciences, play a conspicious and very attractive part. 

The exterior of the building is covered with “staff,” which is treated to represent marble. The huge fluted columns 

and the immense arches are apparently of this beautiful material. 

There are four great entrances, one in the center of each facade. These are designed in the manner of triumphal 
arches, the central archway of each being 40 feet wide and 80 feet high. Surmounting these portals is the great attic stoiy 
ornamented with sculptured eagles 18 feet high, and on each side above the side arches are great panels with inscriptions 
and the spandrils are filled with sculptured figures in bas-relief. At each corner of the main building are pavilions forming 

oreat arched entrances, which are designed in harmony with the great poitals. 

The building occupies a most conspicuous place in the grounds. It faces the lake, with only lawns and promenades 
between. North of it is the United States Government Building, south the Harbor and in-jutting lagoon, and west the 
Electrical Building and the lagoon separating it from the great island, which in part is wooded and in pait resplendent with 

acres of bright flowers of varied hues. 


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The Machinery Hall. 


Machinery Hall, of which Peabody & Stearns, of Boston, 
are the Architects, has been pronounced by many Archi¬ 
tects second only to the Administration Building m the 
magnificence of its appearance. 

This Building measures 850x500 Feet, 


And with the Machinery Annex and Power House, Cost about $1,200,000. 

It is located at the extreme south end of the Park, midway between the shore of Lake Michigan and the west line of 
the Park. It is just south of the Administration Building, and west and across a lagoon from the Agricultural Building. 
The building is spanned by three arched trusses, and the interior presents the appearance of three railroad train-houses, 

side by side, surrounded on all the four sides by a 

GALLERY FIFTY FEET WIDE. 

The trusses are built separately, so that they can be taken down and sold for use as railroad train-houses. In each of 
the long naves there is an elevated traveling crane running from end to end of the building for the purpose of moving 

machinery. 

These Platforms are built so that Visitors may View from them the Exhibits beneath. 

The Power from this Building is supplied from a Power-House adjoining the South Side 

of the Building. 


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World’s Fair Exposition Grounds. 


Bird’s Eye Yiew looking West. 



Yiew looking South over Lagoon, showing portions of the 


Agricultural and Machinery 


Hall Buildings. 


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The Fisheries Building. 


* The Fisheries Building embraces a large central structure with two smaller polygonal buildings connected with it 
on either end by arcades. The extreme length of the building is 1,100 feet and the width 200 feet. It islocated to the 
northward of the United States Government Building. 

In the central portion is the general Fisheries exhibit. In one of the polygonal buildings is the Angling exhibit 
and in the other the Aquaria. The exterior of the building is Spanish-Romanesque, which contrasts agreeably in 
appearance with that of the other buildings. 

To the close observer the exterior of the building can not fail to be exceedingly interesting, for the architect, I lenry 
Ives Cobb, exerted all his ingenuity in arranging innumerable forms of capitals, modillions, brackets, cornices, and othei 
ornamental details, using only fish and other sea forms for his motif of design. The roof of the building is of old 
Spanish tile, and the side walls of pleasing color. The cost is about $200,000. 

In the center of the polygonal building is a rotunda 60 feet in diameter, in the middle of which is a basin or pool 26 
feet wide, from which rises a towering mass of rocks, covered with moss and lichens. From clefts and crevices in the 
rock crystal streams of water gush and drop to the masses of reeds, rushes, and ornamental semi-aquatic plants m the 
basin below. In this pool gorgeous gold fishes, golden ides, golden tench, and other fishes disport. From the rotunda 
one-side of the larger series of Aquaria maybe viewed. These are ten in number, and have a capacity of 7,000 to 

27,000 gallons of water each. 

Passing out of the rotunda, a great corridor or arcade is reached, where on one hand can be viewed the opposite 
side of the series of great tanks, and on the other a line of tanks somewhat smaller, ranging from 750 to 1,500 gallons 
each in capacity. The corridor or arcade is about 15 feet wide. The glass fronts of the Aquaria are in length about 

575 feet, and have 3,000 square feet of surface. 

The total water capacity of the Aquaria, exclusive of reservoirs, is 18,725 cubic feet, or 140,000 gallons. This weighs 
1,192,425 pounds, or almost 600 tons. Of this amount about 40,000 gallons is devoted to the Mai ine exhibit. In the 
entire salt-water circulation, including reservoirs, there are about 80,000 gallons. The pumping and distributing plant 
for the Marine Aquaria is constructed of vulcanite. 1 he pumps are in duplicate, and each has a capacity of 3,000 gal¬ 
lons per hour. The supply of sea water was secured by evaporating the necessary quantity at the Woods 1 fall station 
of the United States Fish Commission to about one-fifth its bulk, thus reducing both quantity and weight for transpor¬ 
tation about 80 per cent. The fresh water required to restore it to its proper density was supplied from Lake Michigan. 


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The Transportation Building:. 


Forming the northern Architectural Court of the Exposition is a group of edifices of which the Transportation 
Build ing is. one. It is situated at the southern end of the west dank and lies between the Horticultural and the Mines 
Pacing eastward, it commands a view of the floral island and an extensive branch of the lagoon. 


Buildings. 


I he I ransportation Building is exquisitely refined and simple in architectural treatment, although very rich and 
elaborate in detail. In style it savors much of the Romanesque, although to the initiated the manner in which it is de¬ 
signed on axial lines, and the solicitude shown for fine proportions, and subtle relation of parts to each other, will at 
once suggest the methods of composition followed at the Ecole des Beaux Arts. 


Viewed from the lagoon, the cupola of the Transportation Building forms the effective southw accent of the 
quadrangle, while from the cupola itself, reached by eight elevators, the Northern Court, the most beautiful effect of 
the entire Exposition, may be seen in all its glory. 


The main entrance to the Transportation Building consists of an immense single-arch enriched to an extraordinary 
degree with carvings, bas-reliefs and mural paintings, the entire feature forming a rich and beautiful, yet quiet,'color 
climax, for it is treated in leaf and is called the Golden Door. 


The remainder of the architectural composition falls into a just relation of contrast with the highly wrought en¬ 
trance, and is duly quiet and modest, though very broad in treatment. It consists of a continuous arcade with subor¬ 
dinate colonade and entablature. Numerous minor entrances are from time to time pierced in the walls, and with them 
are grouped terraces, seats, drinking fountains and statues. 


The interior of the building is treated much after the manner of a Roman basilica, with broad nave and aisles. 
The roof is therefore in three divisions; the middle one rises much higher than thq. others, and its walls are pierced to 
form a beautiful arcaded clearstory. The cupola, placed exactly in the center of the building and rising 165 feet above 
the ground, is reached by eight elevators. These elevators of themselves naturally form a part of the Transportation 
exhibit, and as th.ey also carry passengers to galleries at various stages of height, a fine view of the interior of the build¬ 
ing may easily be obtained. The main galleries of this building, because of the abundant elevator facilities, prove quite 
accessible to visitors. 


The main building of the Transportation exhibit measures 960 feet front by 250 feet deep. Prom this extends 
westward to Stony Island avenue an enormous annex, covering about nine acres. This is one story only in height. In 
it may be seen the more bulky exhibits. Along the central avenue or nave the visitor may see facing each other scores 
of locomotive engines, highly polished, and rendering the perspective effect of the nave both exceedingly novel and 
striking. Add to the effect of the exhibits the architectural impression given by a long vista of richly ornamented 
colonade, and it may easily be seen that the interior of the Transportation Building is one of the most impressive of the 
Exposition. 


The Transportation exhibits naturally include everything, of whatsoever name or sort, devoted to the purpose of trans¬ 
portation, and range from a baby carriage to a mogul engine, from a cash conveyor to a balloon or carrier pigeon. 
Technically this exhibit includes everything comprised in Class G of the Official Classification. The Transportation 
Building cost about $300,000. Adler & Sullivan,of Chicago, are the architects. 


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The Administration Building. 

By popular verdict the Administration Building is pronounced the gem and crown of the Exposition palaces. It is located at the west end of the great 
court in the southern part of the site, looking eastward, and at its rear are the transportation facilities and depots. The most conspicuous object which will 
attract the gaze of visitors on reaching the grounds is the gilded dome of this lofty building. This imposing edifice will cost $450,000. The architect is Richard 
M. Hunt, of New York, President of the Anieiican Institute of Architects, to whose established reputation it is a notable contribution. It covers an area of 
200 feet square and consists of four pavilions 84 feet square, one at each of the four angles of the square, and connected by a great central dome 120 feet in 
diameter and 220 feet in height, leaving at the center of each facade a recess 82 feet wuae, within which are the grand entrances to the building. The general 
design is in the style of the French renaissance. The first great story is in the Boric order, of heroic proportions, surrounded by a lofty ) alustiade, and having 
the great tiers of the angle of each pavilion crowmed with sculpture. The second story, with its lofty and spacious colonnade, is of the Ionic order. 

The four great entrances, one on each side of the building, are 50 feet wide and 50 feet high, deeply recessed and covered by semi-circular ;wclied vaults, 
richly coffered. In the rear of these arches are the entrance doors, and above them great screens of glass, giving light to the central rotunda. Across the 
face of these screens, at the level of the office floor, are galleries of communication between the different pavilions. 

The interior features of this great building even exceed in beauty and splendor those of the exterior. Between every two of the grand entrances, and con¬ 
necting tiie intervening pavilion with the great rotunda, is a hall or loggia 30 feet square, giving access to the offices and provided witli broad, circular stair¬ 
ways and swift running elevators. 

Above the balcony is the second story, 50 feet in height. From the top of the cornice of this story rises the interior dome, 200 feet from the lloor, and in 
the center is an opening 50 feet in diameter, transmitting a flow of light from the exterior dome overhead. The under side of the dome is enriched with deep 
panelings, richly moulded, and the panels are filled with sculpture in low relief, and immense paintings representing the arts and sciences. In size this rotunda 
rivals, if it does not surpass, the most celebrated domes of a similar character in the world. * 


43 














































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































■ 

. 

■ 

. 




























. 
































. 




. 

■ " 






■ 






■ 






















' 








- 




*■ 




' 
















■ 


* 








■ 
















THE OLD KINZIE MANSION IN 1832. 



CHICAGO IN 1845' FROM THE WEST. 




! 



EXPOSITION BUILDING. 


45 





































































47 





































































































































































- 

if 


( • 















* 3 

c : • § HI ' I 


■ 


’ 



























' 

■ 

. 

- 













- 






A‘ 



49 

























































































































































































CHICAGO COURT HOUSE IIS' 1852, 


CHICAGO COURT HOUSE BEFORE THE GREAT FIRE. 


ifflnnnrnf 



M , !:n!!ir^o63 

BPjCTlfljE! 1 

H I—— 

m ills- 


| •t,]i !'**> 

(SwtiSriMWlJ 

fe 1 - 

Bfi^ 


THE PRESENT COURT HOUSE. 


5 1 





















































































































































































































































































. 














V 




CRIMINAL COURT BUILDING. 


CHICAGO HOMEOPATHIC COLLEGE. 


FIRST’ REGIMENT ARMORY. 


UNION LEAGUE CLUB HOUSE. 


t ai'g h. 






53 






















































































































































■ 


































* 







' 















-1 





CHICAGO WATEIi W011K.S IN 1854. 




A- 


55 




























































































































































\ 


. 





















# 


















% 
















* * 











MICHAEL REESE HOSPITAL^&gggggs&L 


MARINE HOSPITAL 


WOMAN'S MEDICAL COLLEGE 


COOK COUNTY INFIRM A R } 


HAHNEMANN MEDICAL COLLEGE. 


lUgBrnM 


iiftpifillM 


mam 


inuAjyyLU 


">!ii ij.tjit.ii f & ni; 


CHICAGO MEDICAL 


COOK COUNTY INSANE ASYLUM. 


%■ 


57 











































































































































































































































































































. 








■■ 

i-ISa 


















■ 



















. 













COUNTY HOSPITAL. 


COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. 


RUSH MEDICAL COLLEGE. 


ALEXIAN BROTHERS HOSPITAL. 


FOUNDLINGS HOME. 


HMl'CQ. fc'G/. 


HOSPITAL FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN. 


59 
























































































































































































































| m Him ill liBSi! 























. 




1 . , . . v 

- ; 














. 



' 



, 





















RUINS BOOKSELLERS' ROW. 


RUINS COR. CLARK & WASHINGTON STS 


RUINS OF FIFTH NA TIONAL BANK 


RUINS LAKESIDE BUILDING . 




rrmnnnrnn 


RUINS TRIBUNE BUILDING. 


KUINS HISTORICAL SOCIETY 




' V 1 

A.V ‘.vV 




SA FES PILED ON DEA RBORNS'P%N 


FRANKLIN SCHOOL RUINS. 


INTERIOR RUINS OF POST OFFICE 


i 4 f 


T<w •T''l 

luflll 1 






61 


* 




























































































































































































































































' 

■ 




- 

■ 




■ 

■ * . 














■ 














MICHIGAN A VE. NORTH from 31st St. 


PRAIRIE A I E., 22nd ST. 


.S '® 1 




PETER SHUTTLERS RESIDENCE. 
Adams and Aberdeen Sis. 


TcrtCAte 


■msm 


m/wm/mPM 


VIEW OF ONTARIO AND RUSH STS. V 




CALUMET CLUB HOUSE . 


■MnmagBat 




A .. . Em 




p ]3 



DPS .1 

J 




mmt- \ 





gMl 





iKv'-* 

ggg^l 

f * MPWj-g 

Ksj- 

bhUS 



L 

1 ii 


M. 



6 3 






















































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































VIEW IN GARFIELD PARK 


PH*; 


HUM BOLD T PA RK. 




GA R El ELD PARK. 




i nil 

;-i!llll!1ir>llll!l<VII TIP 


“jiilliriitiiiiuiiiijBiftnl 

tejn. 


JEFFERSON PARK. 











"=3 

Yu 



AJL 



curWAwf 



I 





65 
















































































































































































. 








/ 















VIEW IN GARFIELD PARK. 


ENTRANCE TO JACKSON PARK. 


WASHINGTON DRIVING PARK. 


6 7 














































































. 














. 













4 















69 








































































































































. 

. 






; H ■■ 

. 


■ 

if 

* 

■ 










’ • 

lf| S " ' ' i i 

■ 

' 


-- 




- 












PREXEL FOUNTAIN. 


FIRST BUILDING ERECTED AFTER THE FIRE, 


VIEW IN HUMBOLDT PARK. 









































































The Proposed Odd Fellows Temple. 

The fraternity of Odd Fellows*is considering the project of erecting the 
Temple shown in the above design, on a very desirable site already under 
option in the center of the business portion of Chicago. The I emple has a 
frontage of 177 feet on one street by 210 feet on another, and if built as above, 
will be ^6 stories high, the center tower being 70 feet s luare and rising to the 
height of 450*feet above the street level. 


73 























































































































’ 








■ 


























. 


























. 










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. 

. 






























* 




































































































. 












































\ 






















- 




' 








- 































The Masonic Temple. 

The idea of erecting this imposing edifice, designed for the 
accommodation of the Masonic fraternity of the City of Chicago, and 
for the entertainment of visiting Masons, was conceived by Norman 
T. Gassette, Past Grand Commander for the State of Illinois ; and 
the enterprise was organized by his consummate ability and was well 
advanced towards completion before his deeply lamented decease. 

The Temple, designed by Messrs Burnham & Root, Architects 
has a frontage of 169I2 feet on .State Street, and 113100 feet on Randolph 
Street, and stands upon land now considered worth $2,500,000. The 
entire frame-work is of steel, the exterior of the first three stories 
being of undressed stone, the remainder of gray brick. The twenty- 
first, or roof story is inclosed in glass, and has 6,000 square feet of 
floor, enough to accommodate i,ooo people. The structure is as 
nearly fire proof throughout as it is possible to make it; it is furnished 
with 14 elevators; it stands 305 feet above the street level, and cost 
$2,000,000.’ 

The corner stone was laid Nov. 6, 1890; the cap stone was set 
Nov. 6, 1891, and the Temple will be ready for occupancy May \> 
1892, and is said to be the largest office building in the world. 


75 
































































































































' 

. 




























♦ 





































The Woman’s Temperance Temple. 

South-West Cor. of LaSalle and Monroe Streets, - - CHICAGO. 


The idea of erecting a large, commodious and at the same time, 
beautiful building to be the headquarters of the vast work being 
carried on by the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union, was 
conceived by Mrs. Matilda B. Carse, President of the W. C. T. U., 
for the State-of Illinois, and the project has been carried to comple¬ 
tion by her skill in organizing the movement which has secured so 
grand a result. The Woman’s Temperance Building Association was 
incorporated in July, 1887, and the work of raising funds in sums of 
from $1 to $1,000, soon began. The lot upon which the Temple 
stands has a frontage of 190 feet on La Salle Street by 96 on Monroe 
Street, and is worth, at a low estimate, $1,000,000. It was leased from 
the owner, Mr. Marshall Field, at a rental of $40,000 per annum, for 
the period of 198 years. The plans were furnished by Burnham & 
Root, Architects; work on the foundation began July 1, 1890; the 
corner stone was laid Nov. 1, of that year, and the work is to be 
completed by May 1, 1892. The Temple is thirteen stories high, and 
is to be an office building excepting the rooms set apart as headquar¬ 
ters of the National, State and City W. C. T. U. The cost when 
completed will be a little more than $1,100,000, and it is estimated 
that the revenue from rentals will be at least $250,000 per annum. 
The fine hall on the first floor, capable of seating about seven hun¬ 
dred persons, with a separate entrance on Monroe street, is called 
“Willard Hall,” in honor of Miss Francis Willard; its walls are of 
marble, upon which will be inscribed the names of all who have given 
$100 or more to the building fund. Memorial tablets, pedestals and 
windows will perpetuate the memory of illustrious persons who have 
lived and died for the cause of temperance, and the incense of prayer 
will ascend from this beautiful hall every day in the year for the sup¬ 
pression of the liquor traffic and the salvation of the home of the 
drunkard 


77 
































































































































































































































































' 

. 

■ I ■ ■ 




. 









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. 












































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■ 


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79 


























































180 


140 * 


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too 3 


R 


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\.K Semenov Isl. TsJM: 
* ^ Vassiliev hl.» ** 


Maloi hi. 


Stolbotoi I 1 *' J^Liakov. 


ScialJi <Cgpe „ 
> V *~4 - 7 t ! 


fn Ca f ;e ccM 

o Daryyijp, 


^nudir ^ ^ 


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^Yakutsk I / ) 

!/; / Caps Naoarin 

-ft* 

~« <L " & YKaraginsY"* Ba ’J 

°'- ' Id. BEHRING 

I.St.PauiZ 



Fadievskoi 


) \\) Siberia 

J's ^^Z?Cape Ti amewrt 


KELLETT LAND 


romskaia Bay 



WRANOKL la 


4 .aT 






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> ?r 

*6/ S.Kolfmsk " 



^Ostrcfvp 


•*>j, Caj>« Lisburne 
>& 

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„ Herald hi. 


Icy Cape 


iJP^S'ES* 

SSS^ »\ ^gV / _Y'~tS^6u!/of 


r\, T . J S r C 

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lands End 


- T ali M- H, * , 
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-Z)yer -B<*V 


<?“/’« Sfafp^i 


Pr. Alfred Cape 



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■- *■ x '-'■ ” v" 9 1 Pi. ■*’ r Yl’ l,0 ’t 


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n 0 Esquima ux Lah 



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jcisea of %/|r4^ 

OKHOTSK Z~ 

CapeZElizabeth I Y?JZ 

Rnlh^^tcD^ ' 




Nunioaek hi. 

C.Newenham 


Kamtctatka 


Behring Tel, SKA Ounitna c ^ 


^ % Copper Ial. 


\f r ft 

iff of Amour *. 


•<? Attou hi. 


>> * A7$£a 7*/. 

lp * Qj °v*ki ^ T j 


'fierce «£’, 

/>Vy ^ .-■■ n *koi vn 
Sirausir 

qi <2 Eouseole Chan. 
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liar up 


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it of Maternal 


JAILVX. 


OFigarni hi. 

ISLANDS 

edo 


Fat z. zoo 

• .Moor hi. 
hi. 


0 anal ashk a ?/*/ , 


Tx.G 

1f(j|Et. F ran 

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TBehring.-Ba f v 


odiak Isl. 


Sitka' 


AllyhaTal. -.D V ^ 


B.de Plata 

• Crespo Island 

Morel! Island 

’ \ t j Cure I. 

Palrocinio Island ! ‘ ^ .Philadelphia I. 

...»juajico sima/t Is. /7- , r •• _ , tl^rk s Is. Passion I. 

rjpqsa _ 'Easa hl.j'o cano_h?__ * ' ^ farcj3 Tropic of Cancer k^iansky hi. J - -Gardner J 

Camira Isl. Massach useU * ' 
Lamira hi. Islands 

* Wake Is!. 


0 Sea loo choo 7s. 

9 <7 5^r^V9 " m ..•Majico simah Is. **' 
PFormosa ' n 


Ganger, hi. 

. Or J or 

» h.._ .lots Wife 

Margaret hi. 


Jar dine hi.. 


^ Babuyanes Is. Lindsay Id. • ~ :- 

•V MaUIaVna OR 


PHILIPPINE ladr 


ink is. ,‘Anataxan 


•o » D A ^ Balam& f'•* v ftWLeytt 
labuan/\.- s ^ fPrT‘ 


A nson 
Yap 

danao p e Uiih. ^ li 


^ Say pan 
s.. »Guam 

Mackenzie Is. 


Swede h. ..Jlallls, 
tlson ■!$.. • 


v \j w xar/uavs.* ,• 0 C ) -- v —.-* y .. .. . f> 

-! r.“» E- ,'s 



hunk in Is. 
Greenwich hi. . 


7 US .EY'^ &o' Timprlaiti 



~ _ -’Cornwallis Is. 
&L Bartholomew Isl. 

*• Smyths Isl. 
jp Button Jgyjj 


, ,: i>.Calvert Is. 

' ^ i7u7yra»e /«. 


?• i\ r tiD Hanover 

X3ls ^ew. % Ireland 

_ _ ... Britian -'(V. 

Ioih^'.a' 0, ^ .« . ^Tinn'r A '' a f ura J> t P t»eui 

Christmas Isl. S«" 1 ''' j ’’ J " n %f. &8 t- : ;.-.Zouifiade 

• Bot/idonderT t 

Buccaneer ft ref.,. :\ 

King So 


Hope Isl ■& <utgn Jt 

itlanlic Isl? carbo . r . ou ph Is. 

* _ • Simpson I 


Cape York Areh^ : 
SnaKtset 


ORTH 


_-FisTAKN; 

Shark 

Steep Pf^Uanieltr liar. ;- v --TX-v' 

HoutJhans\ A US'] RaLIA 


-P 


t • Farquhar h. 
Z \Halifax Bay 

Cumberland h. 


J J 


Pleasant hi. 

^ die San A ugu st ine hi. 

lata hi. Ellice’s. 


PCntsenstem Bk. 


Prince f Wales. f\\ 
Arch.'J 

Qn.Chi 


Arch. 

rlottee hlS\\^^ 
Qn.Charlotte Sd. 


Vancouver hi 
Juan dt Fuca 

Olympia' 


C. Oxford 


'Nuhau 


Woahu 3 Andwicu 


C. Mendocino) ^ : v 'g^l 


Siiu Erancisco\ 

Santa 3Bar"bara\ 

San E iegoN 
Guadalouj. e 


Port San E; 


T r opic of Cancer 


Cirrus Is. 


artolome' 


I os Alijgs 




Palmyra Isl., 
.New Nantucket 


Byr^n hi. 

Arthur phcexix is. 

Gardner • • '.Sidney 

.faiaiu mi. jyuices. _ 

€_ , Chri°‘°™' hi GrouP’*" 1 " »/T»ri union group 
c?° ^Santa Cruz Is. D.of Clarence ■■ danger Is. 

” Pvmah hlf. eejc l l " SAMOA V OR 

Espiritu # ’*AiE\y • 77ornJ/s. Savau^ ^avigatob ^s. 
Santo ^Hebrides I *• .Itoufi? '-hlanua ' 

VUu Levu ^in IS . P«/ mers(0 ^ 

^2anwg 0> <*Ectndabon * * r v 

Burutu 


# Fanning Iel. 


a . Walker hi. 
Chruimas hi. 


Jervis hi. 


Malden Isl. 

• Volunteer hi. 

Star buck hi. 

■lenrkyn Isl Miaou.- 


Rev lllagiyedo a 


Nouka Jlivu 


Abrolhos \ 


SO 07 


Pertnt^ 3 
Geographe j 

Cape Leeuwin* 


! AUSTRALIA 'NEvi 


Curtis 

£fcf\\pt , 'Sa n dt/~'fsl. 
r'*s.>L \y 

lay 

|C£ N ‘ 


•Hunter hi. 


(ciUEf^ ,, , 


A.Seo.S° u 


Australian 
Recherche Arch. 


Big/ 




•di ei) / 


kdeli 


Sp‘ nCtt * 1*1* ^ 


£-a«9» ,o0 .,,^‘ 


m, 

i&fFPt. Macyuai 
Jf/TPort Jacksoi, 

—t T& S ( 1 

Cape Mowe 


Norfolk hi. 
Bosarelta Reej 

i ie 

Cape Maria 


Macquan 

Hob 


dux isl. 
is Hat. ^ ^)y T ASMANU 
irt YwT^^XTasircans Benin. 
Pt.JD.aveyi Storm Bay 


IN ORTH IS] 

NEW 


Nels 



DfRIENDLt 
. is. * Rarotonga 
PilstaAii ____ 


Woodstock ’Isl. 

a * Flint Isl. _ . 

Ei- 

soci Srv «/4: v> .. 

's.Mopelif, i.-.;. ;. 

n- i.tfi 0 '- Tahiti' % T-u 

lP l Har pe lslJ 


Marquesas is. 


~Vusquez Isl . 
KERMEADEC IS, 
^ *'Raoul Isl. 

> 'Curtis Is. 


cooks is. ,-.4 C’q. Gloucester 
Mangsa. _ **„. „ 


_manyea_*___^ ^44^ .GumbierTsl. 

Tdbuai Is. ^ ^ * r , . tf;,* 


Osborne . Bupa 
Bass Is. 


c 


ZEALAND^ " CVf 

south JSL^SPort VicJrii 

CAd/iy iutpJif Bank* Pt. itn. % *“ Is ‘ 

* //^^Dunedin 
Stewart hi 


Snares Qu * &* r - 
0 Id.Auckland Isl. 
« Campbell Isl . 


P& /«/. 
Bounty hi. 
Antipodes hi. 


Macquarie. Is. : 

Emerald ffh 


\ m *r'Sabrina ^ 




jvt 


Balleny li. 


Fatou Iliva 
appointment Is. 
.Honden Isl. 

PAUMOTU OB 

neaux Isl. xow is. 

’* Whitsunday Isl, 


% t-JIood h. 


Sail 


('ape ~San Lucas 


Colima^ 


c 

Clipperton Isl 


«.i>wnca» 
Gallego hi. # 




ilUmrldi' 1 


Oeno hi. * FEIiigletI.~IR: 
IHlcairn 2d.' - D “ da 


<h Id.. 




Planter Id. 


t Pilgrivi Isl’. 


Cagricoai___. 

,Sa)ll 


N 


CHART OF 

THE WORLD 

M M£RC*T 0 R’Z PROJECTION 


•: Nimrod Is. 


Area, _Laiia Staresve.— uq.nii 5U,uuo,0(W. 
Area,'Water Surface. “ 11 150,000,000. 
Western Hemisphere. Pop. 95,945,500. 
Eastern Hemisphere. “ 1.546.000Jj yQi. 


R 


T 


Antarctic Circle 


c 



80 


































































































































































> “‘V °Kane Basin)ciader 

MHO <0 

^PKUDHOK 
KKBJ ( ' LAND 

Kayes 

Copt Inglefield C uIf 

Parry \ Peninsula 
•jr TM Wolstenholn e 3d. 
Carey It. • <T 


w itSay 


I ays 


ae vuy 

»-, 3fG'-~ j 

S** , Xive^oo/ 

’erf £ AFFIX'S, 

(I's. Bajjin Islands 


F F 


& 




roaj 


>Ponds Bay 


’*A a ?C£>tf greenlan d^ 


Cape Adair ^ 
i Scott Inlet 


: Cape < 


, * xr t'v f jT/rtPi 1900 **BJSi)Ritenbeni 
LAND ‘ jP ,jGodliavn iz: ^ r Jacobsha 

\. r r* .. .Vj "<j- V__ 


* j llerckan, 








.-.^Resolu ion I. 


'..v(7. C/a a /ey 


HALL 


Longitude from 20 J Greenwich 


20 ® 


A Scott Inlet . ^ _ 

p I N * <9^ //r <^?Omeuak 

Disco I&H^S. RitenbenJe 


^Christ ianshaab 


Qylsleinborg 


I.CoSukkertoppeu 


C.Ahert ^ 



Cape Farewell 


if [opedale 

'PIvuktoke Inlet 


'Strait of Belle Isle 


St.John 


-LtHfdpc 
U C.Sable 
fC.Cod 


da Is. 


^jiK V^r 

p Igjfco^ y °Btf 
^'^JjCape Hatter as 

larlestou ^ Bering 

.. hassee 
tat. Augustine 

Lva&iv^?-- 1 — 

■- rT VEST IN hi A 

^f'Sjrb'uia 


C.Breton-hi. / 


Ardencaple Inlet^. y 

M 


.^0 Koldewey Is 


\\> j. , 

JAMESONS . nBiverpool 

L Tj{i 


Cape Barclay 


80 • East 


^ 77l€(r e/ it f > J* • Seven Islands 

i Gillie Land 


Hakluyts Head ° JV^C^ C a ? 


P; 


Madeleine Bay 

Cross Ba 
. Charles Isl 



Lee So** 
.Pe// Sou 


iforn Sound 
South Cape 


‘^Wlope n 

KING KaKL 


KING 1 

T£"-U ‘■AKD 


/ea /a/. 
do Byk Yse Is. 


. y* V 

r l U S V vV' 

. 3“° ,v’ tC 

yl 


JV 


Thousand Is. 
Hope Isl. 


^Qpj Shannon Isl. 

Pendulum Is. 
Clavertng 7/liltierJ £ay 


Pear 7a/.Q 


'V 

Admiralty lsl.~J A 
Or* * A 


^vT^.lfcATenz/e JnZe* 


Soukhoi /^sis 



Cape Mauritius 
Cape Middtndirff 


Fern 


“A. 


'ape Soukhoi KARA 

A. \>iyniKis land Tchaste Isl. 

Cape Britvin/ \Cape Klokov 

O ^ J / l-o* 


Carry 


Coast 
Brewster 


fj Jan Mayi n Isl. 




c t r 


f^Kostin Pay^N V 


Ca/>t Ewart 


Cape North 


? Banyanes 


Arctic 


v Pret<Z^Zorc^^ft)EL ! A\ILl 

*C.Co^enAorn ReykiavikX fiAfL«/cr/a 
f \ Hosting 


scord 


k 


-w esterkAs. Craciosa 


11ADEIR 


CANAItY 


Christiansund 


Faroe hi. 


Stc dtland. 



Sh et la nd Isles a Berge 


Orkney Is.. , 

St. Hilda. „ 
Western Is. 

Skye 


: deen 



> 50 

North >h. 


Cape Finisterre ^ 


Oporto, 



Faranyer Pu 
Capt 


rd C a P e TchemotT^-*-- • 

rJf'T)' **»«■« 


? Orlov 0 



Pay Puea 
Corunna 


ERN'IS. uctwau POItTU m q 'r* V Sicilu) I ' 

/oyaM- • a. P* b °ji£pazfuEJOJT mUN'm, 

Sl. Maria C M« &»» 

Strait of Gibraherf^JA^. un if </ _,,C 

1 angiey p„ j/ bj 

CapeBlancu^'Ah^isi^Afs: 

. is. » Maroc/ 0 


5a?oIy f /i. ^ogadoS 


»a 


Fe 'ro ‘ 



CO 

Jamaica 


m 


maica « • *. 

BIB BE AN ‘^ISLANDS 
■cimtoSB A 0 i 4 ® , J V i rti rT e 

,lf -Farladtm 


Cape Bl meet 


CArE VERD IS. 


S.JagoCape Verc 



Btssago 




Cdpe Taimyr^ 



--7b ® 

[vamskoi 

T $**7 



gXNaHm(> 

^'L>i’enU 


/ 't>Xei^3eisk 


ipola 


rtT » y 

qJ.C^ J Cape Bojador 

' '“SAHARA" OR^REArDE 


Bi')ina o 


mbuctoo JJiUnao T ’^ I^ew JDougoIa"\J 

f^- Aga^le* ' s ^^ ( e ^ Cataract. 

rW ocobb\. 


Yakoba- 


•v 

Monrovia^‘ - 

Trade to w 

>iv& ^ Fernando To 


Cap « 


fa 




Duke Town 

B1AFRA 

Pt. Thomas I. y J 


scension 


Valparai 



- -.. 

Jla/BToa" 


/^iFPoenos Ayr 
nstitution^^ 1 ^ 


^ranagua 

^4Santa Catherina 
>rto Allegro 
^an Pedro 
Video 



' la Plata 

_ ' Cape Corr Units 

. 3al*ia Blanca 


f St.Matias 


Port fy.Julian 


Pt k* ( Vmz 


Falkland 


■ Vltlandt 


_duron»-/». 


Stait n I.l. 


7,// *: Navarin Isl. 


% 


^#7 


SOUTH ORKNEY 18 , 


Livin 


l mo n 
Smith 


Elephant nation h^Laurk Isl. 

• • -Clarence Isl. 


Cape Possession 
Hemp Isl. » -f. 

y7jt*t.Willlam 

I (j'QRAHAii ’8 Land 


■ SOUTH 

, CP- Joinville Isl . 
ferr or Gulf 

SHETLAND 


Sergipe del Rey 
Babia 
Olivenca 
Porto Seguro 

Porto Alegre 
ictoria 


St. Helena 
o 


nvbon Isl' \v 5^- G ° ^- 

T \ X/0"^ 

Loan go V y-^ 

Livingstone River\^San S/iljv 

Loan do 

N.Redondafe^a A ,, „ 

-Bengueiyo"-''7 t)OH 8° V Lake\JlAke[ 
Mossamedes/GUpSTElA Y an 9* e . 0 . l .°Vyass4 
Cape Negro , ^ te 

Cape PVtoyl-ovAMpd' 

N DAMARA 


de Janeiro 


”Trinidad Isl. 


“ter 


Saxemburg 


Tristan d'Acunhi . 
. naccessibleT -. 

Nightingale.I^^ 


* Gi-Hyhs Isl. or 

Diego 1*1 hares 


Georgia 1*1 
%*: * 


. Marquis c e 
Candlemas Isl.* 


Travers* Isl. 


Saunders Isl .• sandw ch land 
Montague lsl.\ 

“Thule Isl. 


O 





latiu sle''&»;r*C2'x 

* Gobdo 

*4A<*rK ; ..^MONGOLIA/ 

^ ‘ DESEHT 



( Koor. 


« n «f ^. -t;, Socotra 
C. Guardafu 


■ei ran ist. ^ , vry ,—— 

Mooria Is ' LJom ^yfHyderai 

A^ABIA^Y 

Mangalorel 


, ~ _ Laccadive s^Tra^ [uebar Andamanl 
A JIj A.q s i an ^ 9 •. Calicut ^}p a iics Strait j 1 


GREAT 



Madras 



Magadoxo 


CochiM 
Cape Coinorin^J} 

Maidive\ ^ < ^olumbo 
Islands q'A 


Islands f 


^PVCEYLON 

r p Candy Nicobar h.** 

i A ( K!>!>»> . 


■V, 


N 


Prmha r.SegcJaslle It. 

iqFemba Am ; ratUe j4 , , 

Aanzxbar 


D jT 

*• Chagos Is. 


jy Batu Isl.\ 


Diego Gardia 0 




ytrk n_ Aldabra Is 

•^bi^uiloa . . - 

-v >. /v._ t> 7 '.'Providence Is' 

^\%^Y°rfa P eA m ^ 

?. ,Uo'™r .-M 

J-M 

<yCC^l a Si “Nary Isl, Albatroult. 

I ol Tamotnifa 


Keeling Isl. * 
Cocos fai, 

0 

Apaluria Isl. 


Sofala 


j Tamatave 
rCilT^nanarivo 


Walvitk BayCC~N lamiL^ ^ 

V/Ynnampane 
^olo)a^r> KA /^'!r^ r - 

Takoo^ 


Bourbon 


0 Af< uritius 


a Rodrigue 


Jlollams Isl. 

Jchabae Isl. *b* AMiqjj^ 


RANS-Jp - 




Dauphin ^ 
Cape St. Mary 


C E 


N 


Cape Town^ 


Car 1 


AC* 


^ 0/ ^ n " P Cr^^ OQJ t°y 

K,/ a * 

***y 


Sl.Pauls hi. 
Amsterdam hi. t 


MARINERS COMPASS 


Hr. Edward Isl. , 


Kid 


Marion Is 


7%/ineon let. 
* Bouvet Isl. 


C 


E 


N 



Enderby's Lan<E 


Kemp Land 


77o 


15?® East 


81 
























































































































76 


74 


Longitude West from Greenwich 


0 n»o«^'a>j 


QUEBEC 


SCALE OF MILES 


\ 


0 5 10 


20 


\ 


30 


V 


48 


\ 










00 

to 


46 










; §f\r&ltha; 

TOg 

oWei I 
‘fir .an 


Cobdeo 
^ Haley 






o Yarm 
Bryson 

prtage du Fort 
oidarendon'Fron 
Bristol Cor^£ 

IAt^ 

manevr 'S^d^^^f <>r 

•c * -A^^ci'VV March 0 

» j ag0 ‘°/ PaVionam stitty- 



































































































































































'T&ctiW *3 


^Otiapiug 


_ 


north 

46 C ' e ^c», 

ckb u rn <y/ O 


Oil 


A 


Latch wood. 

Chelmsford 

>> 

A 

_cf ,S 5 '4‘ N ' " > ' - 


Johns Ial. < ~X-^ 
Airda 


g-O 1 


y-5 Lil.C'irrei 


HtOue* iai>^“ 





Killarney 



X 


80,r 



•r 


/} 

V? i-S- s^-V 

—r"" 

. a ‘ 'V"» ^ 


Q 


o 




ONTARIO 


JrP $ <S Lom>l V !sL vy>, 

YfFitzwillxam 

■ M. 

o 
o 

Cove IaC? a ®Flower Pot 1st. 
d — 

C.Burd -T) Afield Pt. 

^Jobonnorf. 0 °/ „ 

O <yDy<sr Bay • 

K'jo 0 \J>yar Bay 
Cockweurtois'3 Qo^Capo Chin . ■ 
Aberuethy Q L ( 


8tokes 1 


- SCALL of miles. 


10 


20 


30 








Rje r \ - 

, Watt«n»il.r D, 3 b!u T FaUs 

/^South Rprer 
0 Lai 


C*st \ XT 
> 


o 




LaAe Traverse . 
Lake 1c Vieille ^ n 

o 


CMcKtJUl 


V* 


a c> 

/on 

Ofi C “o ^ - 
oo o° c 
^ 0 O o 




church 
Ah-info} Lai 

■^^^5ramnore ^Spenco 
I^^N.SanulfiO 


Burkes rp 
■galls {J 
Katrifie 

msdaleX „ oj? ~ 

lT \ScotiaO ^ 
« 


i 

\ 





Smoke Lake 



n ' Qr.Opeongo 
' Lake 


Source of 
'he Muskoka „ 

o_^ O 
o o 

JVM tefsh L. 



luntftvifl ) Cj 

^ Pj'XA ^5 Hollow 

'J lle {T/U\ ■Ttadvna'^ Lake - , 



TO ’ 


’/Ken esc s 
L.V 


icf® 


1#L 


fUallburtion 
^j0 Kenuawa 


—Pike.Bay^ 0 ^Hope 
o^Mar 

Red Bay^- ^ ^ 


Pt. Austin 




Chiefs Pt.Wfa 1 
8auble Falla "’O 
„ Hcpyorth\ 
* .French Barf / 
ParKheaq 
D AflenfoM 
oaugcci 

CYippewvuiu ^ r 

.Pt. E Ighr^f Atlcv^ght 



Cape Croker 

'ape .Croker 


EXlkcnbur^^T 3 ^ 

wSd5 e ^%S' n3 ' u <r T & M iS 

-iBracchridM Canary™. HaliWr-.oiJ| 


Jp n Griffith 1st. ' 
X s Bay 

. „ I "Xs’.Reppel 
OOxebder 1 


Hope Isl. Cp f) o 


V ?\A Qff e * 
arisuJ^X^ 

oX*. J _-I. 




rr cw - -l r ' MuskokavUIe 

Tor^nceo/ V -^S V f - • 

§alianatiun ^\l//L'ffingtbn 
^o°Kra v^n i i 

^ ’^thbridg^? ^^yO/Houst-}- 


/ Mindcn 




Severn-Briftge 1 
-iPt-.Severn va --4^o, . 

X i mo°r 

O/en/Colensoo Siufg c gjtf** vc j /I, CP 

^ “WAvcrlj jsJN/ VtigSf 

Y'H Annan C W oodfordp^^L \ «• O. ( 1\ )* 

^ V° n ‘fe >"' en S^CiartJS^ ‘\ Uil' ■ ’ oAlha 

■' Jiiolj iRooWord H.otWot.o Bank?^ 

„° Uarkaway GibraltaR^V 
olland^V- Berkeley ^ , KiuiberUyO uu w ol *\ * '■ViTO*' 

C “R C V E YhkS 


i verm a 
o.K. 

Dobbin 
Besboroi Holla 


My\ 


S J Haliffun-oo, U ^ r Lal ?^J 

vR^fcart^ cbi3ac7, ' 

' Vyjrf^ijBbr? jKotspurV*” 


ne'dt 

Ms. ^ C oboe oi 



^Slen 

ClanricardoN 

s^:a g yt. 



75 1r 

r o 


A A I Govern ini 

KB’n’in Dcp»>9<C Bonnochcre Mk . kabur ,. 

(\ 053 KiUal<« 0 

% E o N p> 

/ /. Emmet Esanrille 

^^lTlIicVv^ ckingliam Clontarf 
v <NT p J 1 « Lr\o ^ Letterkenny 
• j&almei 

iJFtipinetm 

reenview ■» 

^ / a°^ ulter 

Ma^nooth / v « 


Flowers 


L’Orignai^ ^ 

adwell*o* ,re ^ Cbutejau BloodeaU ^ 
Irfwlagenet j Caledon.n Spr. 

E S C > 0 . T T, 


Loruejo 


Eskdale 


,, l °“ rl “" n V«-.H-y Duud a lkjt^ 0, -“‘ n *^- ~r 

jliamxer 0 CorUR.o? 




Kingsbridgc .3 Bel 


K O N 

Bud Axc. 






Sj X N I L \V C 

Sandusky® 


L A lAE E R _ 


wXcfoC 33 '^MiUJr-idgnk? 

Burleigh * OdQJ Ba.-mockburn 



L Y Baker <5 AGilmOUT 

jP*<lgeC3 \ 


I ShaVboT 
ultam Gr^ 


.Harding 

.(ton C 

HarlcJwe 

\ \ SViaVoot Lakj 

a&~r 
9? Vvr4 

- -.irV 

■y. 


Burlington 
t^PorV Nelson 
\aterdown 


\> 


/ 




V'- 




o 


ir t a 




& OGDi 

JOE I. E A-.V s 


) PlSelee 


/ 


Longitude 5 West from Washington. 


-*■!, 


A 


* sin. 




■or 




>y- 


Onwejro 




" ^“1 LowvlUe % 

--I .OI 

2 


o 

Ridfi land 



“V 

LX 


-.Camden, 




Longitude *■$ West from Washiagtdtt* 

Gloucester Itoi 





■ 1 / 



AT 

X 


■« <&, 

Sagejille | 


nS 


7*"®^ Si art id 3 Full! 
hsc liouae) 


I W si I J.A' 

\d S.RiVor 


JfinniMt 

'Si ¥?«& 


d 


ikie 

aS&S&s’#® 

feitor* _r — ' 


Height or 

-D'^l R\1 



.Y 


Sturgifn 

' X - .1-S5?: 

OUSI 

yV‘Xcpigon^^ 2p-.4S 

^ “Volf Riv>/^‘ - 

~ # 


% \ Moose Factory 

House'X _ — 







,cH House 


-51 


EAST 

1 L'-v _ 


__ <rlLat 


-NORTIMVESTEUX PART 

47 

ONTARIO^ 

SCALE OF 


F MILES. 

= j=^d -i •■° U/lu r 
„ W Il/S c 




.X A> 

Hichlpicoton ^ ^ ^ 

L. Wenebago{\ 

C 


AhiUiti Mo^ist 

> 

u |o 


' r /l >) ^FreSiWcf a 

rw ! ifafe r// 

1 1 

^ 7 €> X'$hL.Kin* u ' a <C? 

_el > > X* .X aW>Lfc 






- Mouico 

f~PeV.c&n. 1>. . 


,L. 0 ^XiArL. 'St™K., - 





































































































































































































I 



84 




































































85 

































































































































































































































87 























































































































88 
































































































































^tvcaville 

geou C 
uata 

kpcrt - 

A 




MASSACHUSETTS 

AK0 

RHODE ISLAND 



0 1 2 . 3 4 5 




*assaie 






SPA T c~* a 
iPONDt O 


FORD Malden 
>rd 
Milfor d 


\d>«, R. 





CS „ 

^Snake Isu-* ... 

_ Cottage.Hully poi ** 

EL»<om Llouze r.> ' »lv 8h* rl *V 

gfo Hall ' Apple JsLq v v • \^W, 

'House of Correction 

A. Depot F<?rt<T1 Governor’* vdJX^X, 

Oo/.Z>epoiWinthrof\)/^ _j Deer Island' Sr\v^ 
^tfon .. state - Xj^ 

torJ^Uinfl NiU ^ ^5 

- 9 C~f 07 ^ Independence 

Vfautie island , 

- - „ Light House 

Dorchester Pt. ^ 

/Long 
*.Island 
[ Painsford 



15 


C ''.APE COV 


Highland Light 

Truro 


West Eric 


QJ 0 Nr Lj. - . 

w -X?«arragan8ett®/Jvnestpwnl 

W.^>ton>f/-. Klne ^7 | J /W -^^ NEW p 

Rocky 1 Brook >, vFtrsldutns (-—^ -.£► n<- J 

i rP—ST' vc j Vwntlfl \a Moconnet Pt, yA -ft 

eficld A'e^ Z Qil ^ C^ttyhun 

1 Narragmnsett Pier 


c Hatchville 



co J> 

Great 

Wtllfieet'Bay \ 
North Easttf 
X Billingsgate -lel, Q 


Harbor >' NA-Quiss/t 


V S \(wcaft«uin ty 

) J v iw* 3 ^ V* 


^.Falmouth/ '^“j Oammon v *'° /] 

East ) 0 cJVaquoStUi V 41 ^iUonomol/ 

Fa, i 6 M^/°‘ 8 ' ** Island A 

Falmouth «t fl»d.r Bol/ y *? ,mu l’ 

CP 1 - 




.< p C7t °P 

Vv'CtC^ tf,,. /O East C/u>p 

^ ft I&X &P“ k 

l R*?d'-,U' otu Se Cit 7 
k . /*/ y|pamp Meeting 


iVmt Judith 



ikxc^.a *%&”“■'* j£#?Z f?T2®^p"M~tf»g „ „ /a 

„ - hfct» v a. ” /North Tisbury . wjrounds r^~^ a P* P°9 C / ^ 

t h a ’ ^\|;dtrartown / 

£ 1 K l HiJAL / 

:i(c; 


**»/W 


Baee Pt. 

jj . I S L A y d 

PLUM 1SL~-*? 

«•<». o u fr 

Orients—O Oy*^ -Pt- 


\/r^ >Ea ‘ t 
a. rtsnER's 
ISE > 


ChilnCarlTo W.ffey, 
Cay Head r^^/'Meiiremsh^r^ Tislw 

Gay Head o C 

“ /fcquibnocket 
uibnocket Pond 


Bo Man's Land 


Great Point 


A\1 ^{yhappaquiddick 

£il< ^ I < -Cr ( - ,.aJ**!So r 

fTiukernuc 

IsL 



/ 


Hummock Pond 


s 


o 


4 " 


S Sandy Ann it 
BLOCK I&LANL J/Light IIoum 
(Io Rhode Inland) / (^loey [aUnd 



c 


o 



t 




Montavk 
•y Point 











































































































































































































































































































































91 







































































































































































































































































































































94 























































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































CD 

00 


































































































































































99 

















































































































































































































100 














































































































































































101 





















































































































































































102 


































































































































































































































































































































































































104 

















































































































































































24 


23 


Longitude West from Greenwich 


KANSAS 




SCALE OFIllLfcs 


I 


in 


'(Jl^d'sti le o Vaughn 


^ CalhQUl^ jcTur n ey 0 G, ^ £( 

OCIugn y » ' 

C H E y/e N N E , U ^C *' ° 

iSt.Franci^oo r]an[ , 0 ^i 

Blrircity^BuR^ 

UiJ^ua- o Lawpridge 


Shermanvill) p/^thari tte 
Muldro.w 0 



f Voltaire, 

t 


{ o Griswold 

o La Blanche 




Topland 



















KGREEUEY 






Washburn 


‘** wsa ® r Tf\ J r“ 

l I a© . ° 6 jFedbail. 

I! /X/V 






=©J 3 >- 


& 











RkbiHld 

Tm^ 

Taloga 

Viroqua „ Cess c » iff* 








I OTOES 
AND 

1 MISSOURI AS 


101 


100 


99 


Longitude West from W»shiflgteni ' 08 


97 


96 


9S 













































































































































































































































































25 


23 


21 


19 





































































































































































































107 
































































































































































104 


103 


>02 





t 0 I Longitude. W est 

.Souris o 


100 







front Greenwich 

T, 


... • •) Ij'—A w Oi?uon|uge - nauunu- \ 

M 0 V NtT. Ajf ,'] & t"'cA /-^3 Sidne V <V- i^y' 00 ° rC-' - ^ 

5 x }L-*' —i\ ?— Pictoo ^ ‘®\ s ALui^y.Cai 

■j bauiahvilleo uf3ilk-». 2>#£X_? -Pon^ I „ 



w ur "”? t r oi-nid ^— s ^^ aet \ • 

L Nl'°° l * T i J <*- 1 “ >n<D' 

Norwich 

GvVJllard , 




99 


97 



W ofitjbi; 


pAC. 


Jfi 


ervillo 












C A V A U I <1°EpisT 

Lancdo,.'^^ V 

1 v N' 

Osnahrock 




H 


4? 


N 


.46 






,, f |M -> ^Whjtz^u tte ^ ^ £ Can 0 >, 

Whetstone Butt^H E T T I N R C R 

#JW J N U E R 

M A 

Out J * 1 Medicine. Pole 




NORTH 

DAKOTA 



SCALE OF MILES 



0 5 10 


iO 







48 







17 


<a.v ,j W*.. *.y \ 

X. \ L 


PAUL 


be 


27 


5l 









































































































































































































































04 


103 




O' 




SOUTH 

DAKOTA 



46--{_ 8C 

menj Butte 1 i m — 

- *4 0 1* 

r/> l ~7 mm r 

W i —*1 I J j ^Pommel Blanches 

V>t / WES I /\ M 


40V 


hd 



SCALE OP MILES , 

20 , -30 

. - - 

—-les /////a For, 

UAn j :f a57es 

Caue Hills ^p.odJe Butte 

martin 




ie:s Belles Pierres Hills 

J ■ ■ mmmmmmmm i 

« 





R D | , 

‘ftf Slim Buttes 


■5^ _ 


# 

Mountain 



?Dfc 



<)w! butte ■Q*. ^ 




^HlSMAKCK ]ip° Longitude W| ;s t Xrom < 

|\BDKtEI6H.j K 1 JL> D E.Ttj S T U 

JET 

OZX) FT\RTCM 4\ _ o Buebanan 


M„M O N 

• ^^tocbestet 

Emmon 8 burgurJ*J 7 ^ eav ^r 


.N 


festfield 


M 



Z.ong Butte. 



1 under Butte 


»«^K 4^f 

AR tL,,- 

- JjTf 

Bu ite-'‘W^±\r y/ ~& • 



: £ars^ 




co 



o 


1 




I e J'i upoleott 

IVIllIoiisport ^ P P*.- A 


ST 

C A 

Gumbo Flats 
oGale o M 
laCampbell 

.Applcgat 
Sand Hills 


1 9 Greer .Vicki. 

T S M A 


tSarnesville ' 


N 



D 


,Ycrangstow{\ c 
fee ter 

M C T O S H 

©Ashler 

Cold water 



© •£> 


- . Clx>ng Lake 

^ I Eureka 

rand City I C P H o E R 
^ , \ ' 0 4reua Le 

° Sutlej 0 J c ^SsHillsvlcW 

Fiat | • \ ° .‘‘Qt 


Grand Crossin 

laddie Butte » 

Marked Butte ‘ WalwoAtJ.p 
win Buttes 


w 

Ov;l 
irginia.Butte. 


"Coreyo 5"^ ^'blanket 1 

' I 


/v 0 , 

0 RO H.J _ 

\\S;,r,jy CHI,O rono 


It uigor'^iatej 


jficau' 
.Scranton 






'arts 


D 


o Tliijf ore 
Stool Zaite Vermont City 


*]!K Irisl; /burf 
tuokeo . ) 




?-ciav e 11 


oHoVeff a~d „ . 

McGrawvllle. \ Cresbarp 

Millard 


o Voices 


w _ ff Wmt* - 1 \- 

Getty hBiiTkIi. I • F«»' k 

1 •- ^j^Copuj “Ellisville, 

rtmfcjTtee Ten ~f 

j^Sedgjvick Llj 

- rrJUuHy e u( tes/S^fton®oV.!«L. * / f' " in JlaWjoJf”* 

. W, Af^^&o'Warnecki 

- - Sugusta -Goddard Mar ^ 

^Fielder . B1 untl 

Bussjtrcp Shiloh (-S 'ejinvll 4J 0 

oAV.IUIK Ji % „tr/ % 

\\H^ V U Gd^H, E>S ; Chapelle jc 9 U, b 

' ‘ « 1 - ^ » . --o a n ti 1 n <r o' I O I > T'to 1 






a’nning ,B 0 

, 7 / IS ° Cedai 

llo^sseau/^ , \J Gfjendaleo 1°Sweetly 

I /<tn?'nhah .Ml i ° Ames 








27 


: b 

Ltwn 













oSUilx' 

S 

, jl easing^ 
Dan£oi tli 0 \ 

Dean 








. Aukwan^ CHli 
^wer 

<^Red Lakf p\ ft \n'- 

b r u re 

o Red L ike 
>la ^ oPloyd 



It - 

I ennedy’ 


"Srou nlee o 


right I 

^ fc |f-U ^ 

[Ainsworth ^ 


, 0 1 Q 

v . Hammond »[ , ^ 

r. Midvale I ^ i W , 

Longitude 'West I from 22 Washington 




let y ^Ti 

Saratoga Q ^Riverside 

S “Ricbmo^f „ ineol | I 

Emmett 


O'Xcill 


❖ 

Stafford 


_ / ( 1 

A -<’ T E JL )0 T E Plainvlew 


>bum ^ 

Concord^^^^nUoJ^ 


luiersou 

VT HURSTO K 
























































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































112 


















































































































































































85 


84 


g3 Longitude West from Oecnwioh 







Vynnton ° 


yi 


iO 



D 


..RAN 

I Ft. Gadsden 




% 



Itoxh&m r W>; 

^Fe rrell 

"""Ben lift.— 

I Wakulla Springs j 

JrawforUvillw^ 

K U L 


erw#ke 
.1 „ 



_ ikncs Bay 

___ >Jlald Pt, 

>—pf —~g£Tere«k 


'Dog 




i. Georgs 


Q 


& 




Huckleberry 

2 - I 




liiunburj; 


S'" 




A D„ I 


K 






o Lak& Bird 




^ScfUb Hammock J4 m y 0ft 

forV Forsatc-n^ew Troy^ 


StepB 


D^^’i 


Bradford 
„Island 
Suwannee Ji ay 




Cedar Key?, 

AV^ A’epO ' , - --. . 
v ». ^ o Snake Kt 
Jarirs 

With l< cooch ec -Bay 







81 


Trand Ji T Cumberland ZiU 
§wd^Ft Clinch 
Strut more 


inBdVVi 

DjaT^ 

Callahan 


x .vr’crnumlljia 

"Ch/esVer 
Km (Ameha 

iW 5land 
_ ^onta 5 *- Nassau Sound 

Duval N 

n SM w,t 

J J'Vei,,, SSjt Pablo 

''' 5 

PeoriaJfyrMandarm^C, . \ 

Wni'i c ore^XT|tark)v''lle 

| iO'vtUetlan<\V Tl urV \ Q 

. > /-a' -utnier 1 , - * # A jl «**•'•„ • ^ /IWOfth 

.£/•* i'em,.,‘/i€^L Y\i «* tonJ?*r\^opipaon 

'iTa‘ 7v%n rWT ^ 1 

JiJVr h \9.r, /r^i w *A^ s i ,rll, ^^V!jSSSiCW»3no'ia.... 

WvM-lF.it Marlon 
Widkroe5SDt u oy^o rfu \ |() t W <■/ ,, arM , 







Fajctuv ... , „ . is- MajBfM; 

McC ab/ /\ h A C H ; 

OldJo», JtfredtoH, Osceola GuIlleSVilLeJ 

P if . y - - t yanniugdooeaville^o^^ -rry 


St. Marlin? 3. 






Grove 


~t 


>- 


ItslTfronsorf 

’tfyhnaon't Pond “Mow 1 * 
v/ tYilliston - AenunKUiti - 

Y 

; Cre & FantvilA 0 °' 4 Martin 
j 7 Barco o I Leitne 
G.ulf Ha mmoc k 1 8ht .?.?<«T.Sy 
MorgabvDlc 0 01 M A. 

t Cotton Plant a« 

,U ttov^y^a 0 e-A'%, 

.... X“ n tyjr-o Duositro \- 
Jul»«iiedr , q__:_ — 

yS,- Kock Springs 2 anloJ ^ wumwi omw n , 
B^HeidUille BelleviotA \-Mo*s Bluff 

|oon.lloa L.M 't'Qf&'fe. «»' 


Forth 

jltiClo 

South 


Anclotc a 
c ffeyaA 
.dncZyf^ 


Citronellc. t 

j*Falrmoun^^ 

0 t %,^Arlington. 

3> S Orleans^ v ® -T* 

0 Hdiiii °) j 

.Oakdale ^Su; 

fltta-L 

« Pond - V Ja>I, ^ 

ERNAN 

loksville^ 

Wiscono 

"Bural^iaS^ 

ra 

* o Chlpco 

StThomaio V 

^\an <3> 

«PortJlichey ^-^Eann»l 
Ehreng^TCarineL 0 V 




•scr' 

Sfeiftka 


lata 7 «/. Pfa 6 ’a rtol 

T“> Sft Augustlno 
i7 »uwtr;* s 

J KV^o-Ueach 

- iTMidiiTotulK^Tjasrafia 
1l «kV» t « n rf 

Hoij Hrau<mn/-y _Romo 
O’ \ rJfaniumeaa 

oCikferville 
*S? r'^iMatanias 

t? 

iudermer 
^°D\ke 


Inlet 


^ Spring Qrov 

v . cihaSisville ^ 

WoWon^mjg^n * 
Cahdlor tjnrj; 


V4>t 

■oka CK> ' u 


«5&. * 

terJlai.g 

”"n> < 

rberrillo 

'•AVinona y <T 
Sfitinc GajdonC/ J* 

Spring q 

X C c y \\ Ponce Park 

J'b.-r XdiT^tV 

, . _ _ _ [Utoelvi^N s]Vl>oLait‘l o* 2.—Awr.w Smrrua 


‘ XA- 


>od 

xl S>ta« 
nond 

oiiy mi 

lytonA 
wUi« ^ 
Port Orange 
T 




V.>c\ 


^ Lake Halen 


0 PonraannubV-di * ua»o'*."’» 

i o WlgteyJ^iendalo C El U>1 l^Oraoea Citj d,al 9 
./ ( "N /L’jnatiHa Snrlcprjprango City Jc. 

/fo J«rfFt.Mttso:i_ e ^;» ///^'•lElltorpi* 

— 

- 


tuis(l 


nciottr v ^ Ul9l0fl 0 

1 ar £ n . !\J | >^ 0 Keystone Park 

Seaside! -5 av 


I/fo Island , 


Jo ^ 

/Dunedin 


John'* 




Fortd 


BonU-cW V - > 

.New Oadiip o) y 
Zono A’ey If K >4 f ,‘V*’ w\fr 
Si.Pr'-^'Nir^V f 0 *^ <t 

ffaeug* nej/^ ^x*^ 1 ** Bv# 

AnnaMaria^^^PS^ZJ , . 

Arteo_MWl®^%), Vln/l? , 

^aAllWrffiA T^i 

£i ? Sarnaoto plasota^^^^ 

Ztt.«Swa«otn ATe^Oy^ 4i(V 

Ine Lev^l 

Osprey 


FLORIDA. 




SCALE OF MILES. 


' Dry Tortugas 



SIW . «*V Fort UetK 

t/jT JauWv’.l 
!\|b<^«wb. l V.« * 

lm "”S4i^u4y! 

te Oprs. .cCn 

_ 'Ej 

y 

;oy 

Big^prcss J 
>§ 



, N ' Jft G 

W nudo P “ tr V L »4» 

Convray 
iAe Con way \ 



- c _ B Scftt 

°A'ia 6 nOrrl i . ar(u,V 





, ‘ on > cI,ul< 1 Y'/..Ap/ioWti(, J t c 
Fori Meade M / o ^-slleedy La ho 
Chicory _ Fi id 7 d i^ropj ^r. 
'ivingelonK*/ 

■/s” 


j-vrusO J9l& * /j - 

or Palm 

Long Boat Inlety 


raousvme ^ *» u 
flLake Garfield 

ro4x?LT" 



«lie)\Lake\ C* , \ VV\S 

ij/l^ssimniM^dk-e t ackson % . Mlccoo\\\ 

3/ “T‘ (i 


r^tA-e Arbuc 







trnSTfS 

Waucbula v\English 
Stanley ojH oPopwh (7 
,olfo Spring? 0 Zolf o kiK^lIat 

i&fflia.-f ^Cwftftlteo . 

. ,1 . C a/LabrKuhlman' 

^arlljApop^W' ^ frM 

Zo^Steurnea 

^) ^Arca rf?a Za*c (folds 

we Davidson 

N ocatee 

_ 





C/Vv, 


^Lakt Annie 


Cleveland 




Gatparilla oY 

Main EnlraneJ^^^ tM ( ■ ' 
Cayo Costa Island] O *tj& 

Captive lsl\ \ \ v 



ii^joPunta 

fian£ 6 «/ MT—^ ^ 


a 3§h d K. 

&JI. A. Key , 0 
Bird K Middle K. 

Ft. Jeff* »‘* on 24°W 


0 5 10 


20 


30 


40 


50 





OUvtf 

Ferry l\ w 

V 




O V i 


30 - 






deLoor^’S ' JL 

c' tfff ^ °S*( 

v #0 Fluchg^nna \Sr'Oran g OffiH'vt. 

■ 0 -F s Vernon I 

Red B ty \i c ( ^lilier’>49:rry 

j/gj 

J felountstown® 

m<?, 4»Ss« : i* 

Pv ^-0 ^Porterj 

Point Wash 




O 






4r 






North-Western 
portion or 


Longitude West from Washington 




2 & 


Li 


Vjj-J 


/ 



Caj^e j&m 





rf 0 


^Indian Jliver 
Inlet 
C&. 


ZiU, c Marco P as$> 



Qlake Traffo*d 


dL°^ -E* 

"^-L 0 — 

U— 


J*. — 




OKEECnO'BEE ) 

/ — 


-4 -o^— - - - 

^-Jt_ _J_ -L 

gHH-—■b- 

3 -ill, _k^ -Ilu. 

__1 Ji- - 

Z.-Z - nl^Z — - 

- I_D_ irA^ -Dr _Ez^ 


<;« Afotvo 
Caxamba* 

Cope Romano ^ 




-5^^- 


__ ill— V 


3 — — - — -Mltfm 

-1 ■*!_—C«aan333taw 


" - \ _ A _ _CocQanU.To^rii 

■ A Zv--- 

1 J )1-— — — 

- -IiA’zrZjrzr Cuti 



Disc-! 


TONCE HE LEON 

BAY sWJ 


- I, A. j» --o- 7 T,, 'n/ ” C.PIorida 

. n. — V'-N — —• -—■ tlatl ( fpifuldUr 

_ u< . 4 - - —- - * h At u 

4__ Jyt-- **■ linggml Key* 

_JiJ - lb 

_ ) — — J, ‘ % jfilutt's Key 

f.p- ^ Ch/istmae PU 

X$3Ja%P/> - F^L ~ 


Forth West Cape 



Sandy Key o 



v,°*w: 


v 

Contone A’er/o o 


1 o ■ 0 1 —--— 

ApZ Eey , > ‘a>J7 

iiiio/ianan Ae^ 0 0 o*'-' Lon^ 




'A>F 

ox.//. 

(Largo 


wgo 

•igruc 2 Acy 


x> i 6 VM*/SC*T» 00 — 

F t < i r ^ 4- 

^ r < -entr* . ^ V , 


Contone Key 0 o Grassy j 

Itacooon Key ^7 ,?r, AV »v ^ ’ /Vat ^ 

JWbsot’s A«y 0 ° 0 A-c^,^ '»A 4 I 

; x te J> __ 

========= __ ^ 4 

Longitude West from Washington K »-y ^So«« ehita 


Island 


BAY OF Zv 

UVeA ^ Grassy )U3v Vfs. iC 


X'dy 


X 




J sl. 



















































































































































































88 


T 

Middleton 



JvVnasoga 

,, Corinth 

°BurrowsjV G 


> Ripley 

, Orizaba 



C^ffidiville 


fFalknei 

HiikJe 



Glen's Sta.H<>jl 
. BumsrUf 


87 Longitude West fron t Greenwich 




Iuku 


Rienzi? _ „ /I 

Cartcrsville ■ 
i Allsboroug: 
f) lSoo/ieville 

i Hfllsii 
c Plei 
sew Site 




Cl O L _ _ 

HJlufe, Dig Spring 

Afsi^Roclt’ Crfek ' 


. n ip4aua Ridge S B 

* '■ ifo 

IHUU 


Eastmtito 

® o 

rremqjo, 0 




Okolona / 




mkforto 

Churubiree 


0 Hodge: 
\llen’s Fae 




a\,r ,y o/NrS| 

,-C@„ n „ ■’o D-I 
Jllnmlii tou Fearce’s Mills. | 
. oPikeville Lan f| 

|c^)etroit 



i*th Lowe! 


Arte&iaV 

o E 'X lA 

Oktoc^ 'Tl 


Feam’s Springs | 

-B - 






..., ; ads-V 0 ' 

c, /Blount* Spring/ Chepulfcepej 

A^/u ia ./ Re1ds ,/ ¥ Vida Wfe 

T N amor Sta.jGumy 3v f, , r 

ills ^Brake\ Cr ““> 




Cross ly. 











114 


































































































































































116 






















































































































































































o 







































































































































































34 


* \ 1 1 ° 
r WpbuXspringspl^RiXeo ° 



Cramps' A oJjsck&jm&hoOjl 

iC -te k 4 e BoE jnrf0 NjTwmois E r^!^*t^ 

\ M oV^UiJ7r°T o <J°““»■ 

. oLjlM ° Clift 

- _ _W.AA m _ _ ^ 

[oaulSprines 
^ o * 

IRofiinso _ , __ ^ ^ 

Rb a ^’ 1 ^' / Cj?, 3^ U n * H 

. jPtli/g Prairi^Gh<?° /\at>/o*l4'dr?«'sioro Jlttk/r 
jef nnatl| o o j^^VW^Gr./^x C r oss Roadp* oWegley A urora 

^ WA «x : °- 

Barren jZjP: o LibertylGr. ° 



Trego 

« , i “ »y ° . N 
O Rule I 0 Mountain 

Carrollton 

t leasant Ridge „ 
Bellidonte 0 



> xf —ar ^ 

ood o Pugger’s Mills 
Marshall Pralrje pj Ao3 aftai ^ - 









35 



Longitude West from Greenwich 




ISCC.J - 0ak n [^\o R-=ta 

-vQoj^eJand — \ 
MidtttBvSettlement 









-■\VPPer o 
Creek 0 




D =>S C 0» f « r^f” v,lljHili 

' y Bfa. ^ett RoM Cree Lfidaftoek j ^ 

-k'FOfir^ ° Boles Stillwater ° ^ 

La fave 1 Bnc kj^pb o *«T ( Mill 

Stms_—■——^ w q Ai ••Moon tain° 


o I I 

1/L 



R R vS3f 

—— —— jiftiui 

Brazils 






pingoi 
slower ^ 

y &line ral | 
\Rlam^ 



S . o 

3 ) 

mile 
Is o \ 







Shel 
sda: 
FortTo 




33 


oe/?.y° 

Woodland 

Texas Bagwell 





>_P Halesbor oug] t 
» 

Coolesborougl 


Mount Vernon 

^oeai, 

Wmnshnro iph 


Simpsonrille 









Dalnger 

VPltts^Hjrffh^S^ LI ii en 





. J—W 

o Shongatoo 


dlawnl^Finn ~\T~ V r\ l. n fj U Bl 4 IT >Lanark s / 
BuehanaiJv Hamaloi/d) axAdamsyille o 

o \ . v j )> D P an I F 

Buena Vista o^L®' v Port Landinir j 

" i /rTffiif 

— — -, A / Tjohnstille 

o ii T Bafeknet— ivtilp 10 O ppucrmiitA-' -JEMorado ff \ 

MILL f/B 5 / ' / ... ° . | Mount Holly to i®™^ 1 Ri ' i 

”* “ H I? f L/A/ n IM Hguolln / Liddesd. le lo rbamrmp.noll A. —-j Moi 

X Snipbuy,. JpAla/sMil] l , ® V,!,, {Lisbon ° v Lambert o o o rtg^on’VflUl 

>V Fork/^l .//kJA^nJ Dorudo ^k Spring 


- (±)orcheat\ Surit^land 

•fcVeMl «!q L & B 

EJeno ^ r Woolley \ “Hills 

Bradley VI M ) 0 ° W “f fV' ^ Blanchal^ 

' Mi State Line { ^ V S P ri “S £ 1 


IJo N 1 

rh^;°e oUei „ \ 









*ug 0 View Ber 
ntain Hill )- o . 

)Snyder 

am ' ■ 


Scot\ville 
U HaynhsvUle I \ s 


» _ p< , , 

HJUIlLurgllbeeCil Cree 
^/Petersburgh /Poplkr 
• </o ( Elon o’ 

\o 

Ripley 

















College 
Hill / 

vJord 


Tor\ence 
j Junction 
Wive, °_ 

rcnudu 


brough 


i Elliott 



Sabouj 

Reddinc 


ARKANSAS 


SCALE OK muss 

in 20 so 

i — r~ 1 —. 


Population, 

Area, square miles. 


802,525 

63,015 


.ntyvUle 


17 


16 


15 Longitude West from Washington 


14 


13 




















































































































































































LUBBOCK CROSBY li DICKENS 

^ \ Llw 

><}ckum’s ktatioh cl"' T '/4V( Lab 
i P’uhokiCp. 


haardh' 

K I N G 











\ Crossing 









-1 r °o° | 0 

•^VjF’/at Rock Water Holes Gedcles Spring ' 

❖ _____ I __ _ _____ 


Mail Station BricTge 


0 Dry Lake 



U 


*lif ^ 4 

Mountain Tank ° 


^ Horsehiatf^ank c 


Howards Spr 

V^derleeks Spring'll C KE T "jjSCHLEIC H^R 

Old FortTfml 



Dolan Spring 

mtUtrn 


s P ri "° ! E -0 7W A 

t S.MtYAapooj b 

’ SjJJ-fo 


[dson^. % iKff 
1 /: 


t/cri/a^- ' 
U Spr' 



v 


t 

jPARMERj CASTRO 

I —I - 


bailey: lamb 


Allende ° 


Presidepde San 
J uan de Bap tlste 


HALE 


j j 


FLOYD 


/ 


Rensdas^ - ,^ip-eY'^>y5- l 

• —_ { _ > ^ ' ^h ilaresa** 


Progress 


Ligedo 



ipUO! 


MOTLEY H°TT le 1 



%» m 

ip f *JL 


24 


118 











































































































































































































119 




















































































































































































Longitude West froua Greenwich 



120 


Longitude West from Wi 




















































































































































































121 


Longitude West from Greenwich 


















































































































































































108 


106 ISODRtWae 




Floh(la\^< 5 A 




o 


Conejos 



Price 


\RE \m-V A T I 

~%g 1 Sulphur S; 

36-~ Laguna 

t /i£/at7‘op PI 

r- m co^r 


• . y< -K b ' .11/ Ji* Vj 

L lAkcs**^ i f ► iV 

_ _ 

ifJF v 

| fund f ,, T . ^ \ / v <? y 




jVingate 

P?flance[ ^-^T^CoclIdge 0 
*a\.u^o ^ tiW ,^ t ^k,Coj/tiuema| 


/.- r/ 7 y IjICAftiLLA ‘ 

7 \ Horse Lake | 

\_. ~f [ APACHE Park yew 
L_^Soulder Lake 
!" I IND.RES. 

R i I 




%<! 


v w° ft 

Icrra Amarilla\o Laglfab^.j 


jd 


R 

Antonio 


, rs eBeshoar 
Trinidad {/ A 

\d 


H ] | j G. ^ y 'SjetatMs 

OM^tonc Tower I-J .>CiboUa^ ^ 


of^ 

i#§; 
IV 5 ! & 

A,4 



‘nas tlerfA , „ , , 

r ~- >, Vaileto 0 ^ 

Cangillor 


no* 04 ] 


' tSf 


)lo 


Divide 


tan a Bed _ ^ 

San Mateo 0 

ir,V\ 



f ^ 1 31 /^ . — , r ,. 

f \ #% J vJ io8Psp'B "~ S Gallegos' 

' 4 o ^ a P°,%F t -'C^onlf7»V < ^ seta 

f ^ J? Pereas RaJich./ ‘ / yabiquin 
* 3siL . Coyote^ < Chamai° 

/ ^ Vs £ ' tre 3 a '7 0 V/ 

/ Chushilla 

— Fs^ajioJa 


Tan 


j I m 

o-Monie* 



& O v6 t , » W 

v r. ^® ,v 



wdT 


*—swilSW 



Lakes 



«* N J5SSBpK « 

a , n,n Tr a l -h*-.^^ va 

A | rr . 'KA\ r iI'O ra 

Ui Clara «t* v>' / £. 

Xambe ^ h^O~^ j- *MTtnTAi 
-O Pojtaque-^ lSan^.0SP°_X RluC0T 






MIL ITARY RE S ERVE Cl e tvePr _ 

j if 'ic Ojo Begra < IV • SaiTlIateo °3KJ' Tf X r>n- 

NiitHay ^ , Blue^&ek' //eMtfaSor ^ b alleta^ .# ' 

■J-\ '- w./Ajyi LobOo .jf X*T 0 v<.,n^ \ \ 

■Sl/Juni Buttee ( \ -r, ^ w. \ ... # ,|,riacitfto\ San'Fra*n;>i; 

V .-*$?% , ,. 4 f San Eata^vV^^coneda-^o 

iH^-^voUujr,,,. ^ % 0 jo de 04%° \ 0 San 3 °%«KS1SS 1 * 


s 

r-Iol^eOsoT' .SJiNTA Fl¬ 

it 0 / vma » e .^7 I 

(Jemes Cf /'^v 

Sa - Don w n XP^ za 

^^NAlgotlon 

*,'/ ' w - (Casa Salaz$ 0 , > 

c?! ^ Santa Ana /# -; v_ 

^ 'S Ber71a *yV/Tejon° / ° j ' J 

t Xa Guava W Qoldlr 

X\ San I « nacic /y t '^ aW '' J ‘ o°Amarillo 
Alani^da^ 1 c an Pedro 

— ¥ o Sail A'nfonioj 



)rt_Union «y xip u>- 
10 gr 7 ^ 

. „ ^-TSboemaker 

-- * I-50 ^*^1 ^ --* 

oTesuouef | / g^La#yiK7^^Sapello5y^ s t' : " us 

^ 4ot, ;MilwrXl ° ° DaV * 

Dos Machqs^ CiLj^° —^ »vr\ 

Glotl Tv S 0 S WNWy. 

A&'lJi ■ Ui T$ 





iolium v --w 

L gibbQt tc\ 




.«%/ oDou^erfj/s'Sjjrinj'jn 
v Romeros Spring 


til i^Lamy 


Arowc , \ 

'W^s' 


^Francisco / 


^ i^^XSavola^ If \ Ojode Giilo 0 

J eV 

| _ 5 . 0 fb Caliente 


t d 


iid 


plateau 


a ^ sic. caitys^r^r: 4-. in %\ 

^ .••'.'AcomJfe r 7> T —-4S J5I liifc\ . 

Laua 0e</^- ■ \W f v ,/' PueLhto VN. '/ 

i <StfSS 


s 


Albuquerqne I *iSS«. 
p^T-^Tijerds 11 


#San ys/dro 


_ Sulzb'acher 

FUltou ^“4=^ Detnal \ o 

Pecos o'. 'V-kaperito 

ElPuebloV^—v _ A 
_Boj aan , ^'¥i^T 

N~ 



Morater 


OA 15 


R|Z0 NZa^j. 


J 

Mr, 


>' j _ 44.v **^'SJoSedillo o 

a j aritboljigieta Sta. . 
L& P.JCyCL 


Ojo Yri 



Kd p\jS? > ' Jo '^- 

ipezvilleo^ 

Cabra Spr. 

/ 

alUnasSpr. , 

MW?/l 


Los Colonias 


'TAT 


a Stinking Spring ^ 
arri Spriu(/t»_ __^ nl 

0 


( L ° Ch ilili _II 0 _T 

y at^v i ,' -* "x. it 0 PeraltiiTO.^'. > .OAQ^ie.lQa-naiQ&»-- ■ " ■ - — ~ f “"X~* i 1 

^^, PUrC ^r^# ValenC W 08Ca '''‘‘ O M edera r 

V Rr.4«o<if e 5'5r i#|>'fea Loter I0fl Tajeae o # . 


VE^itu. Tome/ 




:len Jian^^o 1 


! 3l 

I 

I /fed Cone 


Crate. 
.?h*eiNAL tlTS. 

' Air . r .j •. 





Cienega 


isl' 88 ^’ 


. i "i...- 

'Alkaiy&, . b U 
JHarsh''~"S <$r 


t “\\L 

j.Camp.Sherman 


1 San 


t* 



LasNutrjSfflCo 


Bear Spring , 


ClSyn 


,oTlS £' ; ^LlkaliFlat Monica Spritiife. !' 1 

id S ‘ -4V o Monica ^ ;£,> “JL 

Luera c ’—'— “““ Antonio 




Tipi Springs' 

/ < s.. 



Bosquecito. 


Animas Hiljs 




.mi 

-i-r“ 


p ^ 


C: 


pueblo Blanco olfifcioud 


TriricheraJ/lt. m, vj^% 

. IFeaf ^ J* 5l 

fj.lir as Spring Pinos Wells 


‘ Pond 


’i^iJEaal Oallinas Spring -•., 

«• jv fc . i&D 

Ml.Cjsfrmg 



-1 


I JUimtnSi' 

La 3Zo;-a Spring 


~tiz Spring 

FOrtT 6UMNER|\ Jr^ 

military reservE-'^jE^) ,Suinner 

^cLake 

r eL “ ' 

V 

Spring ®~- 


■t/'il 


. \ w 

^Blanca-* 

l 


'Spr in i < 
Dry 
Spring 





View 


d#Jt 

I,- 


‘VJPope • ^ 4% i?'|‘ 

I, ,. ' /.'••■ ;;’T! / ' B<0 - Gopelan 

4 \ °J° de AnaliA^lo DripingSpnw t—- jf\ % 

mSalina^Pkf^-- I SZ\ I % '4'^k’ 

^ J''* J ) Kbidoso o ““ n 


‘•"no. 


^Ojo de AnaliAj 
S Crocker 


AilV„ 


Jftimbree Head 





^Tprt Me llL O i Engle 


Umbrel Head ! 
'-.loinla 


-H' 

telSpr 


Cavekipring 


fe. 


<?/]&. ■ O White Oaks C' 

P:\Cari o Vera Cruzy, 

#5. ’ ^fo 0 oS‘/4«» 

ffaB de ifeuttlenttv, K 

V -J-S?- yp.. ! '>' : %1f$Kapilan 

T" Port Stantoi»--’"^r>_fflLincoln 

IL Eon.too^S^f ' ’ 

' Fto -GopeJOjI 


I 

k; k 


A 






! lUndoso o 1 & Old Fort 

\_\MESCALE Q R0 APACHE 1 paja'dio Spr/t?s7 

J PORT STANTON ! 

_ . -- INC. RESERVE’ I 

TLiaiot^^l d,. laLux _ j 

Presidio < 


- Alkali 
’'Dry Bed 
q Dry 
®Dry tal f £ 



*(■? 
Lake (A 


Water 


• \Summit 






sch/U 

eP 


°m 

<e 

Hudson Spiing' 

0 

Crawfor^^^** 1 ARY RE8 ? 


1 


N 


Dry Ar r 

v.-ft '- ”»o 


i Rio 





m 


Uummings 


Fort Selde 


5 ordsburgl>v "° p « \V Florida 

yramidTTXl ^n'e 0fi e/y Mu£ y^ > ^ Coleiuaa 


1 LisboS 
l’s Pass 


Gag e Tub 


1 3 MILITARY RESERVE - 

Slocum’s o 
Gov’t Agency 

Zuni 


i 5 Organ oW#;_ 

San Augustine 


Set 


11 

sou 


!K,.\\ Zuni ° ' V\ ^v^~San. 

-'^-H^^^Cambray H 

y^ec/Vat. HIwc Hock Ton/T"'***^ 






. I *. I ° K«tU Spring _ v 0 


T/on-Jalptl L 


V\o 


1 T/oriJ| Ojo Blanca 


0 la Tenaja 


rs«r 


Afton^L IaMesa . . _ , 

10 c^mberine ol J Anthony Oyo delosAl 


oo^,^ LanackV 

1 ' La UiS 

s' sJineJx' 12 


Alnioles """ 


oHachita Siygei head „ \ j neJ L * U,. Viotonai 

M § la t» e %-a „ . jpT-» nff -\ I Strauss^Vl on ya 

J^#>| \jWf- knob iC cjlumbua Cy \ • L S an< ^mlJ^ m ^Lookou .t _Uogerd>^^ E | Pago 





0Isleta 


U 7/ 



ICO 

'.de Guzman 


31 


■ jooca vz 

4_JL_ 



/?! 




//t/FCOJ 


1 

t San Eliza ro 

^Fabei $ 

rJ>io Grande 
Porter 


c^’ 


E 


29 



Bobbins o 

E ~s^D 

Seven R.voi's 

t «e T 


-1 '/flfr F 

• Slaagttrs'Eanch' 

Salt Lake l 

mm w mmmmmm * a mmI • rnmmmmm m m • r~m 


NEW MEXICO 


r*8caati*af mm* 

o » lo to so « -to, 


W’i I . 

,w *.» V-, 

3*1 V. 


Captain Pope s 
o o Wells 


Longitude Wee, from Wellington 


27 


122 
































































































































' # X 

If 


plot SfjjiJJg;, 

m? _ n C 


" Solitaire Butte |s 
5 Moccasin Spring ^ 
^Cottonwood 

3 ? 



Saltfepring Dinoali 
Tiri-nuh-ha Spring! 


ferado Mill 

IsM 


\ -s' V -N-. 

Yucca Spring \ < 

° Altoohah Spring/o*$t / '^oca.ir 

cMountain u \ ^ / l\0tk.Nj )\ 

Spring, ^S: |pRed Late ' y ( 

Spencer’s ltknch 

\_!' 

■■ Tipton 


fla %*, 


# „Y° 




P:|chlon|le Cityf e jV, i ertl i 

*1 ^ ^ l?i •**' 

sf fe” CeBbaft 
l^T ^ ' -‘ =3? -■e* 5 * 

\W «#Caypte HjjTe l< 

e, r o* 

J ^ % .1 

^oAjexaSdria U&it 


3 Mohave City 










INeedles* 

SpStoSS?* 3 , 

^MOHAVE -O'" 
. %& NGE rxy 

loX.rBemool^' 

-4r: 



WDDY 

o 


o Clearway? - ' -'■ 




r 0VJh 

Skuil 



Si^aO j N» 

.Mery «rf%C<° NeW Vir <H a 

Greenwood I 

\ I 


MLLS\ 

Smith VWleyi: t- 

phgt^r — 

r\ T)a/I Prlnlr \ * W ^ 

& 



"rianettown 

CACTUS 


Black A ountain 

//^"PafEJj. 


PLAIN 


■lit 
%% 


^ ., "^T 

^&pel|iaf o 


Walker 

Antelop^ai|yf^’ ai \S a ^C 0 ®1% 0 T, 
c rvO fefX 0 ) ^MeeJlle \ 

P ^J^ Staci0,f % V, *V ofleAi 

5Jr“» *f“i- 

**■ 

«*s g »»% £a 

Wickenburgh v 

S Seymour 

Vulture o . frgmith’s Mill 

* } % ' i/JL 


yEhrenberg 


C%% S pring 


’ Plomogot 


^ '<C 


’ C „, oNewWi 

^Mineral City 

■& Rodi 

^ 0#" 

jM* Af'U 

„=rr *%j „, 

}#"i: 

,0 oSileit 


Granit&Water j 


v 

Stoddard /;§■ 
Jqwnsend 

/ { ^Smtsw 

, drii 

i hble Bee 


&Rfetl£ 


«%> - 


'•» ^/riKENIX 


p T A f5T^^>pC 


Tertpe j 
* Af/ff/CO^A 

INDIAN 


Dome 


Mammoth Spring 
i'astle DornO' 

H> ndUlg 

° BlindiffiJk " 


o Water 
Castle Dom 


"■ Tex®--’ 


\\umu 


, \ 
Monumeiti'l 

S-. \ 


Adonde 


26 


Jg^-SSSS-=^ c 

t iW&Sy s sta. iia B ^r 

p^ c * 

I Sentinel_ , 16 , , 

I __ i’i - P.ainted Rock 

„i ."• S® ■'''*# 

S 1 SIERRA^Ajy 

^4 % <3? 

ftlohawk^u^it | COLORADO‘S 

O a ii nifl 


Estrella 1 


PI 

ft 


''PLACER 

DIGGINGS a % 

Silver King c \ _ 

pi 0 'X%? 

- 0 ^>7- 

© « /« Dudley7r\ 

v..| ^ renc,e || 

"Mo 

Casa Grande 


/.flood wi 


• ( i Pima o 
| Mingville I “ 

* o _ * € 




ASNno 

o Tinajos Altos 

o. 


Shrs^if I Saucita % j 

o^Eos Popos^^h, ^ j _Jl-£_L 

- 




iglfonument 1 


i 


Tule 0 




nit 5 




0 I .as Playosa^ 

»», %»* ' ■* 
K ^'j£Z ul ~AJ- 


32 


ARIZONA. 


Birigua 


w 


O', 

S\ 

■%,. Picacho 

V. * 

V\ r 'V'df.’s 

'i"Jted Roek 



il 

i o"S& 

! Eureka Spring* “A 


Vi, Saffor-d © 

vfe .solomQnville 




o Santa I osa 


Monument 7 

t^^remont 


I 

Quigotoa 

uesquit 



- 

-%*' 

Cababi O 

o ^ 

■c> 

O 


|m S \ ^ 

^ '*c \ ^3 I 4_ _ _ 

__-V-; • — —I J ‘ o ' "St (ol Redington 

5 I % ^ ^fmericU_Z 

■ < a ^'X Rillitol T> \ •£» %lagMS. Of 

^ M 


v % 4- 

f°rt’fcant W fa ^ %l 

Riliy Wells4^ 3JL 

- -M - ^ 4 | 

Teviston^ 2Q t ^ ^ I 


5 Punza del Agua 


W Llcox 


SCALE OF MILES 
!0 3 0 4°- 





60 


■4r 


IFT 

Monument v 

I \ 

*s 


> .-3 3 

\Sassapi Plat | > 


b 

„ Sahurlto < 
‘j ^ Cerro Colorado 0 ^ 

S/S&uarro § 

£>% 0 r.., "r*Arivaca «o 

rovidence.Wells .0 


Cieuega' 


G Steele’s Sta. ^ ) o^^ PACIFlC — 

o 7^*^ ban Snuon 

Jres Alaiiijos /20 - 1 MILITARY 

: /.?), feoF,ort Bowie 

’/ iiM ' 1 '^reservation 
20/;J£!at '•■s./A -m, 

/ ^' v %, 

Snlbhur Spring *0,?'! 

_-—Or—: 


f 

Dragoo^i 

20, 


^ABeJson* 



'edro „w\se Bpria^ _ 

_ _ . .i P #|f'c H—1 

, ,##i;. OTota 'fe4o?i 0 st.Dl m£suLPHVRsmnr^~- < 
I# |~-v“Vbs|^A' f#-” 

■f jc R soiio/f. £/, * a # K 


Population--40,410 

Area, square Miles-112,920 


\ 

\ 


o . 


,^Monument 12 V ^ 


El Paso ’% 

v. o *->■■■■■ 


\ 




%% h * 

OrQfBlanco" 
,.£**# o 

'•.^Paja-r 


i g# ■ 


Sono ttn 

r~rr — 

/Crittenden 


VALLEY s 


c 


V A 


Aztec 
Hat 
^ala bazas 


HarslSiw 


e’nden J , 
'-ChorK; 


t.?0gb 


itoi 


IT' 


la Moria! 
icson ° Luttrell^ 


oVotaJ 


Locfl! 


o 


37 


0 1 --- 

Longitude We»i.hom Wrifrlngtoo 


33 


123 




























































































































114 


Oakley~ 



42 



40 


WanrTspi'in 



\ 


' Srouse CreeK 











A 


m 



A iigt 

i ; - W Jm 

.: " * ' * r»i i y * , -jSBSS&ls 

;.vX:: V.-V-'-vj^ 

vy^Hv^vS;;.^-V'^V^L-f-Beck^h ^ l||g 

f lilifSillil w t j|^ 

.v;;.* •*'’•: : .‘ ;1 :*: •.*• :kj Y'.V;• : • ’.*.’■■• ••’.■ "S&P 

’’’V•:. : : : .•:••;•• • '.W:?/. : -’Y Y';Ya ^v. 
||k '•<; : : ;.-:vqi^-V•■;:•: Ced 

*•’• V* ••• . *'•'• - ;’• ■•V'.’.- : *• •:' : -s’ ^ 








<j 



:££'£'• Uj' 





UTAH 


SCA'EEOS Wl.Mff 
5 10 20 Sft 














! < 


SNAKE 
oOsceola 
. RANGE 

\> 


\ \ 5a/r Marsh 


Surbani 


38 


B 


H 



o Crossman’s 
Springs 

M 


H i i# 

It ^ 

f§ 3 m 



■uUionvllle 


Pana VaUay j 





<4 


Peak' 


ANTELOPE 

PLAINS 








37 



UNCffMPAHGRE 


{PLATEAL 


I 

/ 


N Cave Dwellings 


WMCA 



38 



124 















































































































































126 


Lcngitnde West from Washington 
























































































































































































































































127 

































































































































































45 


Longitude West from.V.'^ci - ' , njrEon 


^) I -p V aocou vepw-, 

'- ' jAi^l ^ Bur?*xg$ 

\\ ' 

49 —-21 ^° r »* ’O 

I^v A .N( a O TT T7 ^ D Yc~^-\\-Cf 



Owen 

Af m ^^Ft.S.Juai^ 

'PctaoeC^-ft 
lei. 5 








Smith ’# /«{. 

s '44i 


b—» DI : rvc* 



S 






C teor , L 

item Hone*J| 'sJl 

5W 5 s c~\tar?—r?r 







JDtatru el ion 

Cl M. * 


Outtle River 


Quinauk R, 
J\. Grime ills 


[r vg S ^ 

%> 


StilKguai lish ! 

wfcfiH’SST 

r3c ^' r H 0 M t s H I 

JSW.,, * ! 


Lake *- a *"'WW&'fcia« 
/ Qui?iault I 


47 


Vm fv 

Pt.Broum^ 
I\.ChehalUr 
Peterson's PtL C 
Laid la A 










Sou 


North Covi 
V2 Joke Pt 
L.II, 

Lee&beUer Pu t 

OystervIIle 

Terminus 
Long hi. 

Pacific Parki 
Long Beach 
a Ilwacoj 
Hancock 

Mth.oJ Cc'Mmbia^R 




2**l/ K 











rw 


i 

"C^ Christ ianai M 
l \Laie 

Fort Shepherd 




C O X ! X X X XX 




'A. 


s 


CaUle Falla 


A JV 





A 




E\ 




Coins pel Lake 
Che-we-lah 
i Ca lispeN 
Valley 

.Louu fl^ake 




4S 


Kantsiw, 


Lake 



River 


Pend d’Oreille 


£***«/ 



TteuTiimlRi 

eio* 




Ft.Ada 
Skipai 
Ft.Cl 




la tso 


Seaai 
T'llamook lid, 


& 



k 


FaUe 
TiUamoifk 
Onion 
Ihhaleni B 

L.H,Reser > 


Lm.Jtcscrve 
It start* Bu / 0 


t Cu/>tf Lookout 

J..U. 


Or«.tow i 


124 

















WASHINGTON 


SCALE OF Itf ILE8. 


I) i W 15 20 25 



122 


Longitude West fio m Greenwich 













































































































































124 


Longitude West .from Greenwich 


120 


113 





Brookfield 
- - 

ii_ 

.? Cathlamet 




pm Misha'w 



XP -1 '"Riv*emiJ« v / 

r '; P Columbia' 

burgh _ 
Columbia^Cy 
° St.Helen ' 



OREGON 



-jcaljs or z&LuLb 
T 10 20 30 


^7” 'y " Yakima’ 
Fort Simcoe ° 




, j,™ r -y> 

Scapeose ] |rij' n I l 

« »/ 

M.vndaleo ^ ff/i 
f m Gales „ \ IM 
fcpilfrJCr. SautlMl 

' wa'-> HIN G * 


Uniorl^ Ridge . 


-,jn mouth 

t • t ^i? im P 8on 
-Lewiiivjlle o . 

_ __ _ — I Airli«» 

y alley 

Vf ( \>Ck> - ORE. _ P Ar Entei 

llV>fo^~ v '- IV—. 

Ia' t \=,oi <vc " Corva||iS»^(ttj| c 
" Philomath o Tangent 

k Shlf ‘ 

RffESPiT 0 N~ 

.ickardcgS* 


L. <P r0 f rr ' r, 

■-■“ ^■lcer G e; 

Cl 



ancouver 




Lett ton 


Peola o 


Anatone ° a J 



°\WaWa 


fl° 


,*d* 


^Caff5ng'~*l jtwfford 

. ^ _ _ P- VansydAStantoji >t M51UH) 

1 f-Vor uuiper^ Wtn ’ 

t \ is^^^rrr^s. Umatillaj£ II.-lix/^V^\bovn.m 3 igyivrf 

"^“ u * Eocl !»-“•* ~W}J|jJ®sr r«f*V# 


Jone 

J^V Alpine 

IV^O^R R 

Lexington 

•j _ , 'i Lena o 

vj Gooseberry 

‘■'t 0 llepliner^ 

^ % 



L, ^ntUnT^ N 

vule * 



/Cross Keys 


Fulton 1 

Echo Oj^Btvana -SMlW'if/C 

JNoirn^^, i 

M A\T ''l^bjstASPjs 4 , 

^ jbp^Ai 

^■^Pc^hain* A1 ^ el 

i^Euc£inuffi\entO j 

^ Starkey G Hot Lnk 

AlU c 






«Ela 







n 1 


TelooJisetV 




aldron 

G 


Creswell 
oluslaw a 


t V 



R A V 'N J^T Vj 

r 'TLyviUe , *—— 1 


B 


° Howard 

^ A 




, I — o 

^ VMount Vernon 
\ir< l , 

Dan/on City 



Camp -Is^gai r 


[larding: 



Evergreen 


'4_°_ 

>lalla° 

• / i* 

.nchanUrd Prairie 








/ f y Khpfl&tfjPz 

!;iiSp 

! '^.L A M A 

' ^ A 

/ i 


Ij 


^ Pauline Lake ^ 

Ivtir Lake o-^n ^ 

' 1 Silvrf t LakJ^^° rnLake 


liiteliaU 
, Poisle, 
Chewaucan 0 


Ramsey Spring 

ilkali Laki^IggiAalfls p/,. 








WalR»' / a i i 

, E''k Flat '"»* 

j, 0 i 4 'ia%.W^A T L .U 0 W A 

j( phwM \ t 0 -Lostine 

i ^ ''^pp 0 A 

p CromweU^pWtefflf 
(/Jamestoira"^ - 

i/Spartn B K 
iwdertHUeF 

laker ^Uy 5 *^ 

c ' Vrjfei; Bridge 
Pleasant,Valley 

R 

u. , "Y, „Weatherby 

Clarksville^ ^T^ityfe, ' 

7y S T Valley 

T^vAK 

Eldorado o Ht inting to 

MalW-PifjiStOT 
tppy~\ 1 Basin / ' 

*4 


oBrownlee 


v 


.V 


sft 


Salubril/o 

\ 

, Middle, 
Valles 
k\ 


< Basin 

/ 1 

Stone ° 


■ffoCrr 


q llarnc.y 0 < ‘‘f- 



alheur 
Lake 

^ j o 

Harney Lake 




stte 


I EmmetftpU^ 

| Riverside 

Orwell 






.vH*5f rs 


iv; -r s 






lamath 
geney __ ^ 

_Y.ainax^__ 

L i,Naylox 




Oh 


*> ^ ^ ^ 

^ ' 0 McCurdy 



^Diamond 

5#'. ^ ^ c 

f?oa rntf/S- ■ #SV'V^ 


^ a-, ^^l^y- 1101 

ZLa/ce ^' 


\ 


i?oa 

H; 


rr ■ 

A. 1:A fiimlarsh 

m * ^ 



V. 



Drew’s Valley’ 

.V\° 


r arner or 




V# 


*x 





k 




o 


8 > I 


1ST 


E 


W _L. 


mmmmmmmrnum • 



45 


Longitude Wext from Washington 




































































































































































130 






















































0 N V H § 0 H 



w 



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v nA £s/-H 

-il r*s. ^ 


f/s 

r>^>_ 

V$<> 


Bfcfe 

f-%% 

o 


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i<T8>-* 

^‘\«r 


^ vV 

.>* aV V 


a 



fSS? k. 

> <* 

f §| 

# *! 
V4. T ^ 




NM-- 




« f air j&s§ 

fcaMStd^F #<? 

TV' >■ 

jS&P 

S ♦'l*' 


-.■ i 2*f™‘W"*' iiKa V -8 

• ^ pa namlnt dfount<* ,rl °/ 

*»W.^ * k 


2 s» 



fii :7 ig$k 

g -a o j* &v\W “*— 

Iff P "« OQ- 



/ 8 ^jpSVjv, I I 

spl-I £ ,*.§ 

‘•t/jS-^l S tt,M l -B' 




l • / 3 i 


* s 5 

og Q •£< <3 'd 

141 V 

)4 


. ^ § -V yjv 

£$ q «. Sjl? #£■• 

“Vi#8£4fr - v * 







-^7 




























K 

s 


82 

j 

3 

O 

3 

O o 

Jt M 

fiH 

M 


h5 

© 

©< 

◄ 

© 

Q 

«© 


131 


Longitude West fro«n Washington 

















































































118 


Longitude West from Greenwich 


I ID 


! / 


<J r»t« jTwrn PeW^ ^ 


4«<jr» 4 /ilf 

»fc«sv © 


A e 


f 

-ihi'ldke V w 
Middle LaM \J 


Thousand 



i Spring U 


I 1 J is' Vj^iddleLaM 1/ 

! 4 \ (v^/^esfZafce/ \ Summit 

A. \ \ if 

! b £$ 

l^h-Xo Spring 

High Rock 
Lakt 



^ForftyJBerJnltfc 

■ 'Mm 


g \ •Mountain ct 
*\ | WESTERN 

^■L 1 SHOSHONE _ 

> , INDIAN RES. I 

* iA •-* 



cl ^jjgBtM!0QCK 


Antelope Sp ; 


.Crane 


WINNEMUCCA 
u PEAK ^ 






SUGAR LOfir 



. . ePk - i 

_ — .... o Babel C7. 

W/i/fe Rk Alabama City/ 









Lower, ^r^uli^o 





tcca 





3*5®GT 

V '#-./%■ ForttDefinoce /) 


Granite Point/i ) 
•tAKE^Browa yf~Ji »u«b 
m D. res. 

Wmtt 

/ Mtrage 

✓ flot Springf Oneida 





V WHson 


i r% f ’*’« \ L,)Tlr wv ' u iv/i/ioL'/v of/V/» //, 

S «ik «i Vi ,* dry bed of Saline depositf/A' 1 '/ 

H.T P#w» h-u MO 


UlUysd 

‘ Miie st:u (p Jjj ""Up 

C W U/R-tM 


ln^V, S Tr|^ p’aliev WeJ 
■!luffak* T \ n /STOREY / 

I O* U * LBroWs / 1 ' 

• bteamboatjp r. ... ./. 


Steamboat^ yi^l/.lo r„ 3£ 



/yuieauj’tus .»•*. wymu 

l II C v Genoa / ■ 

SO OU^G L A|Spf 


' VoSUWida^J.'^tji Siegel MtisfuW 


18 


’Jills 


16 











Tecomaf a 

aronteiio \y^| 

' Loray I 

u%< 

T Pilot PisB*\ 










i,A 


&AL ! 


vuo tatt 

f 

-~0 * * 1 * v i 

:.o=. Late )(1 

A-~ _M 


4G 


<r 

* 

£o/*e Butte a 

D 



EurefcJ:|3^ eWar ^/ 


vttllu Uul II Ol/wt _ Jr Ly 

|¥c ° Bircbt Creek Sta.' , an ^ er ' :) *'^|rjfe , | 

" " °4ot Spring Sil DAIhambra ;< 

^ [ Hamilton _ „ 

“* * ® Treasure 


Agl&cy 


^^Ajoqdruff 


O^Mine 


Br, 4 

■’.‘32i'=r 






S5S 






i(5n^ 


- ^ . 

<5 '"'7 / "f.| 

PEentoivf 

te 




116 








SA7/V 
^RANGEZ 

% % 



*fef49r/i: 






<!r* 

p7r .- 


r&MT 


a 


/ O” 


I'^OPXi 

tr s - 




... 30 

; 5 @)Tlri-narhair Spr, o 


pl Dorado Ca^7^ Untam0 



^eraao tianf / 
ElDorado City o.|( J;a 

nm«u» i^ic: ) 


ipah 


’*Sugar Loaf Pfc 



felt Pfq£ h-Sr-Sf 1 ; 





I FIELDS 


flRY VALLEY 


3? 







heeler •esf'^S 












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’ DEPOTS' 

1 Chicago Alton 5E 
“Chi. Bur. & Quincy 5 K 
‘•Chi. Mil. & St. Paul G K 
‘•Chi. St. Louis & Pitts. 3 E 
-•-‘ Pitts. Ft. Wayne &. CUi, 5 E 

2 Illinois Central T I) 

•“ Michigan Central TP * _ 

S Chi. it North Westorii,6 P 
‘4 Chi. H..1..& Pac. 6 E„. 

>• L. S. k. Mich. Sou. t> E , 

V. Clii. & St. l.ouis 6 L 
^Chicago & Atlantic 6 t 
"Clii. & Eastern Illinois 6 i 
^Chicago * Grnnd.TruiiK.h F 
t^Louisv. N. Albany it Clit. fa F 
*YWab. St. Louis & 'Par. G F 
LG'-Baltimore k Ohio G E 
•^Wisconsin Central G.E 


TO FIGURES. 

.7 Court House GP . 

fl Post Ottiee & Custom Ho. 6 FJ 

11 New Board of Trade 6 E 

j 10 Chamber of Commerce G u 

SOME OF THE 
PRINCIPAL.HOTELS 

'll Palmer House 6 E 

12 Grand Pacific 6.E- 
U Sherman 6 LI 

1 1 Merchants tj D 
lj Comnieretal b P 
U> Tremont h P 
IT Briggs G P 
IS Ogden G P 
,1!) Clifton 6 E 

20 Crawford 6 E 

21 Matteson 7 E 

22 Leland 7 E 


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T STEAMSHIPS. 


DESTINATION. 


FROM PIER. 


3d St., Hoboken. 
46 N. B., King St. 


TION. 

Southampton. 

and Havre. 

nwalland Pana 
Japulco and Man 
-cting at Panama 
for S. Pacific and 
a - San Francisco, 
ia and Japan.]... 42 N. R., Canal St. 
nwall and Pana- 
st Panama with 
1 Francisco 


Glasgow, via Belfast... 
Hamburg, via Plymouth 

and Cherbourg. 

Halifax. 

Havana. 

Havana.. 

Liverpool, via Qneensto vvn 
(Cunard Line). 


nstown. 

Londonderry... 


42 N. R., Canal St. 

29 North River. 

20 E. R., Burling Slip 
20 North River. 

20 N. R., Dey St. 


Liverpool, via 
Liverpool, via 
Liverpool, via 
Queenstown. 
London. 


dina, Fla., and 

R. R. 

Nassau, N. P. 

Newberne, N. C 


Jueenstown 


FROM PIER. 

1st St., Hoboken. 

\) KSi 1 J’Ai 

New Orleans, via Havana.? 

3d St., Hoboken. 

10 North River. 

3 North River. 

New Orleans (Cromwell’s Line)...- 
Norfolk, City Point and Richmond « 
Portland, Me.. 

13 North River. 

Rio Janeiro, via St. Thomas, Para, 

Cunard Bock, J'y City. 


46 N. R., King St. 

46 N. R.. Charlton St. 

47 N. It., W. Houston St. 




45 N. R., Charlton St. 

44 or 47 North River. 




20 East River. 

Washington and Georgetown, B. 


12 North River. 

15 E. R., Wall St 

Wilmington, Bel.. 


FROM PIER. 


12 North River. 
43 North River. 
16 E. R., Wall St. 
3d St., Hobdken. 

12 North River. 

3 North River. 

41 East River. 

13 East River. 



135 




































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































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;i 


REFERENCF 

PROMINENT BUILDINGS. 

1 State House F 7 

2 Custom House D 8 

3 City Hall E 8 

4 County Court House E < 
6 Post Office E 8 

6 Faneuil Hall E 8 

7 Boston Atheneeum F7 

8 Boston Museum E 7 

9 Quincy Market D 8 

10 Public Library G 8 

11 So. Natural History I 7 

12 Museum Fine Arts J 7 

13 Masonic Temple G 8 

14 Odd Fellows Ilall 1 9 

15 Music Hall F 8 

16 Horticultural Hall F7 

17 City Hospital K 10 
‘ IAS. Hospital F5 



_o \o 

bo 








TO FIGURES. 

DEPOTS. 

19 Fitchburg R. R. D 6 

20 B.&P. R.R.H8 

21 B. & L. R. R. E 5 

22 Eastern R. R. E 5 

23 B. & M R. R. D 6 

24 N. Y. & N. E. R. R. F 9 

25 B. & A. R. R. G 9 

26 Old Colony R. R. G io 

27 B. R. B. & L. R. R. A “o 

HOTELS. 

28 Brunswick I 7 

29 Revere E 7 

30 Tremont F 7 

31 American E 7 
82 St. James K 10 

S3 Commonwealth L10 

34 Clarendon G 8 

35 United States G 9 

36 Parker House F 8 

37 Young’s E 8 

38 Crawford House E7 

39 Belmont G 8 

CHURCHE8. 

40 Trinity 1 7 

41 Old South E 

42 New Old South J 7 

43 Brattle Square 1 7 

44 First Unitarian 1 0 

45 Central Congregational 17 

46 Arlington 117 

47 Emanuel II 7 

48 Inuna. Conception K10 

49 Park Street F 7 

60 King's Chapel F 70 

THEATRES. 

61 Boston Theatre G 8 

62 Globe Theatre G 8 

63 Gaeity Theatre G 8 

64 Tremont Temple F 7 


(■ATHENS) U- 
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Indmn IniMcm 
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ikaw'mont Sta^^, 


Merlon Mill 


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f MT. \ 
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1 Ha<jS 


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Penns u/rawia 
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y flJ Cam<le 

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k BJiry 


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Point R\ 
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^rtfeademy^^ 

iharon.mil Sta. 




'F.R.R Co 


138 










































































































































139 



































































































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Great Inag iig^_/j \ *° • /. ''Turk Is 


v-— {/..-‘"iMt uchoir carre , 


,CV^i l ,a ;>S ' 7< '^ san " 

*o c ^ ^ ^r;el 0 F rance f\Nouidad Bank 


Rscbcesa 



65° 


• *\* *y i ■ 

Gonaives K* 
Go naive s 


-ta Pacta 


T ^Peata Pt. i 

Jl. A 


C A r 



_.irt' ^Anguilla^h 
\J \ Bartholomew o nk 

Saba c Barbuda 53 
i C>m* r»r» 0 ^ asseterre ^v^ 0 'L^ 

A£\K IF-r#*/ 

St. Christophers* Antigua 

Montserrat 0 Plymouth ^ 

, «“HK-$sr; , N 

vl iV ieJ Sai „, e ? _3[ane Gala nte\ 

■ i Island 0 Dominica\ \ K 

Roseair 




c> 


yives ■ 


\l0° 



SEA 


CONTINUATION OF ^ 

THE WEST INDIES 

SCALE OF MILES 

VJO ISO 940 300 


I C Y’** ,«S 

ir“ Aa ( .- ? °' t ''V ou „ Av r< sA' 

^*V** / 0 <‘ v 

I'araguana ^- 
sPtnmsula ** 


'. IQUK 



y mah ; abjij*^a 

^ Tortuga ^ , 

£. Cuftayua 


Ft.Trinite(°\ ^ 

ForttlovalVMARTl 

r,rtr^ri,^ S( ^ c J 

S 

ST.VINCENT BAKBi DO 

*“" rJ *&*?*S»r* 

Cauaguan q N 

CV/-iacouO’oKiiN*oiN|!s 

uw: < »»Y| A* 

° Blanguiila .[SLAXDS ^Georyctuwn 

jabita -Asuncion A,V „ ^ *«/„? ^tonUo 
<% « Scarboiough 


Cnnmua C oj 

C 



Purl of Spai i 


trinioad 


Fernum o 


Longitude East Washington 12° 



MEXICO, CUBA 

AND 

CENTRA!* AMERICA 


n , 60 


SCALE OF MILES 

120 180 M0 30,, 


Mexico_Pop. _ 9,276,079 _ Area 846,615 

Central America _• * _ 2,828,164 _ * 188,369 

West Indies_ “ _ 4,316.178 _ * * _92,248 


Bornca Point V —^ 

***■ /a/\ 

^ %*v <■ 

4 *°v 


rA t}AliA 


a° Longitude West from Washington 


C*P ica 






















































































































































Titusville 

® V 


I Anclote Keys V 

■kmaxaralsl. «„ , 

It,-,, - A nclot«-\ 

; S.Clements 

S. Joseph’, / 

Il alleys Keys J Hills 

Tampa Bay t 

Castor tie Pollux o _ 

Tong hi, &. Barlow 

Palm hi, v\ o Manat if , w . 

JhcaSarazola'y Q Saint Lucie o\oT 


Hillsboro . ?, 


-mi,, a 


Eau Gallie' 0 \ 



Mosquito | S. Lagoon 

The Jiillt 

Capa Canaveral 


Calm I si. 


Gasparillo Tsl, ^ 
Charlotte liar. . ‘o'x e 

San^\ o y 

C* rX 

Caximbaa 1. 


E ort Ogden 
Pine Level K} 

'^ y ~' Charlotte R. 
ne hi. 

C^Me. 


an lliver 
let 


Muntanilla 

.. Eeof 



Freshwater 

Lake 


“ y > a «; R Hry Riv. Inlet 

i^V " 0 '„ Closed mu 
^ 0 tt*9 s Lake Worth 

'' c Zr r - ° 


Cape B 0 .’ 1 ', ti* Gallivant 
— LU ' Bay 

CHATHAM J 
BA T 

Last Man 1 a K. 



. - . Q Walker's k: ° ° 
rupuer Inlet 

■Closed ey L‘t.Lulaimu Bunk ■■ a ■■ 

■ Memory Rocle-o ° «, Ct-Seul Key 

■ Manyrove An 

^ Wood 


rr- W ' 

Hillsboro Inlet or 


°***L°: 


fe /», ■ O Lit. Isaac ‘ 

-= 


C. Sable 
or C.Tancha 

p V ® R\/b/ Idvernier K. 

* E sn^X^Lanylel 


°°Sold 

• PJ.llis tsl, ‘ . Middle Ground 

>4 Beaks K. \ i ’....Joulters Keys. 


S Grange Kays . 

..... *~r 


%, ««. 


* 

$ 

Double headed • 


Shot Keue ,oW 

Su/t 


•.Doga $ 


Elbow K, \* % 

a*. ■■■ Ke **i?r°»\ «■. 


. / -A * •oo& ft * &*y S' 

A» ^ 5 of-tp % ^ V- r'ttdi* 


’ij, . •. 

s f* \ • v <> fc 

' -o.r-(j-av .’J «»■' , , >' 0 ' ■.. Q^Eey Avyuila '••. 

k ^>>2“ • V '• 

W* ^ •• 


..-V 

enas - c.o 0 • , 





Longitude West u 


v^Ui jt) o lt;t la ». icIa 


74 


72 


7u 


S.S.Ihinl 


Cx> • Burrow r 


—8 2S 




. C (i L r eya 


xS> 


r ' 

“ y- ;J . ^ 0 f M'ae ^r. 

> .5*'^ w .’(jlaa»« A". 

s Abacs K.j- Pelican 
# *. Harbor 
■ Lit.ilurb.de hi. 


K, ■: Moose 
•?? hi, 
Gorda\% 

\ o 



❖ 


CV, 


e<? ^*/e Sound 


~o tv- PnintV-LLol* in the Rock 

£•, —vj •. ot’uunu, 0 *vC: * ’ ■. • • • „ #> 

• O 5«mtm /«/. /I *yr°.*erry hi. *’ ’ °^A 

r,A ‘-0 'P.Cat'Keys w ..Berry I s ; /S )fXHarbor 1st. 

f f*/ . . • * rl . .* 0 » ev* u.o^) • V 


Chub Pt. Current?& 


James 


' Riding Rocks • /-si'i Ho ,c £°*e / ***•••. * *•!*. \\ 'iitfto 

. • ... _ •oS/ rt /«•« ■ . **.:.• _ ; 7_ 


tiheep Keys 
Q 



Fl R ^nj^%° Pinlay-'s.K.f / £/c 
(6 aulding * . • * * -’.//• 

A'£ JV i>7t 0 VIDENCE 
SM.iteef .. iSAtp Chan.K. • 


-4/u 


CUBA 

AND THE 

BAHAMA ISLANDS 




“K.. 


uthera*rr\Ethera TsU 

'luster Rocks a. 'd 

C iva». ^ ' 


JhghKay \ Wax Keg Q Po ™ el * b WV^>' Vrt,1vtt n< >. 

Normanakey liar. “*• iii.Aan ,fVl 


BspjSanto h . 


% o I/a 

^ -.Wen/r.% <5ft. 

—-o.. V ■•.- 


o o . «. ^ 

\\ -ASi* 8, 10* ■?* 

ekes AealJ)\ (P v(k #T o-o, Watli 


ROCS 


■ 0\<^ . 

• oe_ cv 

^ Grass L.°c en °r 
^ Kay.'/'- «» 




pt. 

'e-Guana-R , _ _ 

/to/ -o; Concepcion hi. 

see Stocking hi. A/. 


° » Lit.Ei .ma'isl/o '^/ Mn S I sl. \ 

^\or r«wa- ^> v ^ 

„ . N^W-^Z/arftor -5^ 

High Kay „• ^ 

War inyo ..?*' «> 


IVhat«c3': 

ia. ■ 


« Cfe.^wtneAoa 


^ o^Kiuera, 


,c=> s.) larta <r ■ - 

■ . . — j8 CO Oo-i-f 5, t r •. 

Pa^ T „ ,n, it ' ^ + 

T? 1 


o.Juan Luis y gP 

WiyWg U J^ h(norBl 

# * trtidiWW 4 Ja+.s. • °*Pedros ^ 



ttanmgoo-’ - * vv- .V . ” 

•: *Sa/i Lag •P.JPittstownvo'^ .* :o‘o» fc 

^ ^ *•’ Jamaica K. Man of War Keyf^ f\ ' *' * y G l 


«/umem oa °- 109 Jumentoa 


- 2 * 


SCAL.K OF 


25 


50 


75 JUU 125 150 


^5- 


f A 


$SA aB 


<w 


Samana or /r »- 
Atwood Key _.cf‘ 

:'Pr5’ : y ^ 

u^ l!l - / f ^ GB 

, (S ., ...s v ' 


J 0 xo* L ‘^\b^Crus O'' 'Mucar'a's-■ .. Mirapcr ™* if CAV c0 

,“^ 0 „-nr>^* a • JSsssn - «• Bagged Is. , ^ ^ ,» V FuG«or e «* , . 


y 5 ?^ 

"^Vo feJs-i'^ Ce.Zurza 

, 1 * 


Pl-^" C'cSroL- -”-' ^ 

■o Q . y #/ . \v. c fvo * v1 
O). Grande ' • • J Leguaa , v 


Pis Diamante ' * • 
Alio® 




9 Man of War K, Miraporvoa i r . 

.. O.Ragged la,. ' 

... ■■•-•- SW\ Castle Isl.ttr 

0 Co. Verde 


C-4 J 

y* FuGeorge ^ AbW/i Key 




£ 






2 ? 


Br« thersL. 


Cabo. 1W 1 *' 


aft ' . 0 \VV « • ' / • 

^ im. 


V> Rue 

c&' 


^ y % z o'* 6111 

Jf Palequecnada - 

c- Brea rX^Bal.adoryr^!! 


. --4:,, 

• o / ln <xmte 

" Po.8.IkrmvngQ 


— TlosevlrDeev~HoUr 

XekHvxB* - ^ Key „ Cayeo 

Malcolm Road v. V—— 

Corrales or ; *.*S Ul.Key or W.CaycosQ w Q^VI- «d.2Vrtor 


W'.BrownShocif Carm,es ael i 

&' V® FiaV°* . I ■ y^P“ ! b- „ i • 

.. . < 0 A^ 181 . Uanof ^A f/^/ : 


y fF (K Jr l 



Hogatiea . 

Little lnague : Q - French Key 
Carmich Qe / ^ Ocean y v N.E.Pt. 


1 leys or 0 (/ 


f<K 


. 1 ^ 


Eeperan 


Csde Butandroa f~ r 


British 


Caymanbrock* 


>« yy/bH/ o 

C.4 Crus / .f *' •? 


- 

BaiibonicaL.-' nTiguabOi 


> -vL 0 vC° 






.. ; Statira Shoal 




» ^ f li ^ 

'■ - h G To-,,. 


A 1 


1 I 




XSv< 

q a 

r $VY\vu. < 




“flavap*- ^ ,y - 


pie 1 '- 




/ /v / # 


cf « 




0 ^\): 

The u • • ' .«• .Great A'.J Hawks Rest 

ua or QJTurks}-? ■ 


Is. : <?°:East K.y. 


Sands Key■^ a ’^ COS \ : " •'. ..'Abreojoso' 

Handy Jsey . ...... ^ Sand Key .\- ranu\lo l, uddrado 

.‘ YA 6 ' ■ l ' * ; or Square Handkerchv 

S'*?* . . ’ 

or s r. jo o 


//, s<5v o ^ ^ 

.c C /<•' c® Af ,0 . 


; Handkerchief 

ijo de Plata 
S , silver Key, 


S'l Bank 


o 


; 3 a>o Navidaii 


<& 


a. JLpA /r' 

8 JV ejr ii 



f, A J 


Port A 

ooretL 

Man 


C.Dame Maria , 
Pftme or Doaaiyi&riftf 

•* / Formigas C.Irois . 
^Mavaasa Id. Town AX, w 
CsTiburon' 
itonio F.P. o‘ 

» u —■f .'f 

-£P-*p 


hioneahilarbor 
Pi* Mur ant , 


/ #4V 




•d WeslB^ 


r o/ilorautf^ 
Morant_Keyi 



2 C 


c.ny,Fry> 

mao a T. C. <4 Bay 

v^ Ba » 

1 Rafael 
Svaiyui Ju^ar 

“ "" ntlacao 


C.SngaM 


V 


a: Portland Book' 


18 


■d bacon 

;V; 

Loose Shoal 


• False 

. • y-"a ff/L, 

p.f>«yfei .0; a ^ 


“S ilinas 


Isl.'heata 4|? 0 


Aila Feia ' 


West 


1 Longitude from Washingtou 1 


East 


1 




































































































































































































































142 



















































































































143 



H.CftKaUna^o - - ^ ^ 

<)fc/at/o oo/eau T »»!/ .. V JUuDtM 
j*/-. J (j o{ S. AndrinrtandmdoB 

K5>^ ilum»buic» %o ^\U r *u 

B,L .. '£> \ w .(? * y ^Vi)ar2^P'CfFi^wrro 
^C°Kre» 'HorrlUoi /^ 8ma V ^ 

Suotii o) H - ^«^an Pedro 

o Piolinoa-ryujujpdlidancP 

ra7//a/co\ P. (7) Suita 


llhio? g 
tifb* ^V 
Moreno 
5 ^ Jmi 


S.Paun 


„ Tacuaty 
S-Pedro J 


r alU 

Tub\jio 

.J5. Bernardo'*^ 


' NTlguape 
X'Z^'C’awtrast* Barr~ 
-j Bay of ParanaguQ 
fAutooiaa 

»A.F rancieco 
S. Francisco I. 
Itapacoroya Pu f Y 
Porto Bello « 


OMirafloros 

^“piw. 8 ;? 08 * 

J* San Miguel 
> :i ?t? / CandeUrlv 


VwjQ AffltJckjiO, 

^^^°bia.*Marta/ 1 
^WSiFrancisuQ • 1 
% \ Pas8/ I 

!§§' L o/* 61 ® 0 V M» 

iCATAA^ARCA 
acavAiM) (h 


**rJ] f 

SjB^ro de Bjkji Cachoeir* 0 
^goaraac io % &T*iSitQ >j 

0andelwj3^^^^'^y^Y ,; >^ 


GBAH'OHAC OS^ 
\ Cori lenteajr?) 


w Carman ° , 
gjCosme 'O^cSfi 


>'BUmei i 
CATH \ 


e^y® Desterro 
ol Vsto*. Catharine «£ 
8.Anna 
Laguna 

' Capo S,JfarU » 


idas 1Juruen ^' 
’Bella Vista , 
XJ0RKIENTE8 
ora /La Cruz o 
/Yapeyu oVj 
5 *£A .o o 
r-ftosano 


8.Fri»oci8co\ Crux i 
de Borja So o 


TO 

8.Antoi 


&Fatoatida 
ilceto ©^Riujal 
S H.l OJA 


Q I ojnnningo dos Torre* 


O e l er a de s 


^KfrSTe 


Esquina 


\ f|/8aivn««\ TuKimlAe c 

A\/l u ^s 4 Vo 

P /€^ ot lB 

“m?£v C °J£. 

ita.Rosa o'-*— 

‘ban Rofiar i?- 


8. Gabriel Bt-Joao c 1 

°D°0 S UJLo, 


X| Hoie^ ^.Die 

Selan. >A 

J8alto 6.FructuttK^Bi; 
Punficacioip -fa' 


►--AlercedcJ 

(, Gregorio/ 

-Doriisw 

Coqcordil«J! 


.jachal 


Limari 


Ovallel 


Bata* 
L^/JEstreita 
y Rio Grant 
San.Pedroc 


Poaitoa'-^fly 
-Cajole o> 
Asuncion^ 

§£° ® Mendi 

gua ° S.Juau 


[o Paysaudu 
Joncepoiott^- 


taleguacho 
, a Ysicui //o 


* oq .Nidi? 
j Are'cLfes_ 


o Romei 


■tfdo : “ * ^Tnar^a ChiyilcoV^ 

P’o’p ,, i \ Bragado^J 

P ^i- 8 W ^ b Cerl "° 8 V Trcn^ 8 ^ 1 

^oLavquen" O 
° LuatLLayqueua ° / 

o Poitague *, • A y / ' 

A M PAS )<S AriT^ 

L.Epscuen &>,' Q Belgrauo 


itamueva ° 


Cape*^ * 

j 8. Antonio 
i*t,Medanoi 


'S BoioresjT' 
° vieino 


Laumo o 


$Cape Currientes 
Ft»Iitrmeneg 




TolteaS^ 

Valdiviaf^ 


\ ''Vs Ft.Colorado 

Bauce Blauco (^Couesa x.^4 
/ Carmen de PHtugbuBB v. 

Valch^r^^-ZV^P 


Hanzano Bay ) *’ 
JTaytao Peninsula I 
Pt.Parga \ 

Anoud or S.Carloslj 
CHILOE 

Castro 


Margensho 0 

HJJ P A T 

l ^ J amnago 


G.of SMatias 
s_ cf\ V a f r ^ es or 


k) Vaidtx Or. | t 

^\^jSan Josef Peninsula 

f> Puevo (rulf 
Enyano Bay 


Chupat 


Guaytecas la. C?^^( 
. Narborough.I % ^ -3. 

PuamLlin J.Q 
Adventure Bay 
) CUonos Parwin CK j\Brf 
•hipclago 

Taytao /. 
Archipelago 

\ Gulf of Penas ^ 

Byton l, 

C*uipanc i /. 

\ *2 /yneUy Bay / jS - ^ 


t Tooibo Pf» 
f Camerons* Bay 


JF f ^ ur ^ 

ffAlalae/nnj 


' i0a nd. 

Gulf o f St. George 

Marques PL A 

\^Langara Bay 
, \ - .Cape.Three Points. 


TERRITORY 


Port Ban Julian 


\TSn[ JJuCf.of Trinidad 

Madrt> de Dios I, W 


f Port Santa Cruz 

Coy Inlet 


AND ISLANDS 


\\> L.Argentin 
| or-jStajCn 


Duke of York i. Op^S*^ 
Hanover /. / ^ 
Cambridge l. • 
Nelson Strait C^v 
Q.Adelaide /a, 

\ St>xtit cf Magellan' 

\ Caps Pillar \ 

\ Desolation I. 


Port Salvador 
} i<T} Berkeley SO. 

B-Falkland 
^3^ Stanley Mr. 

Ad venture Sd. 


Port Gallegos Qeor V*. 

\ Weddell I. 

Cape Virgins 

Bunge netm Pt. \7Fdlklan 

■^Strait of Magellan 

y^f^S-Setjaattun B. 

^^Cajje Pttna8 

\ 'n.C’u pts S.Puula 
^ Cape S Dteyo 

— y ^ >0 T~-> CZ? Staten L 


gto* f 
Z».:a o^ 1 ' 

. Londo* 


Hi amnia 

'Toooj.il 1» I 

CobIJa j© 

Ml J3u t ' 
-MexiJJouos . ^ 

Af^rtncv lid]/ J 
•Antofagasta 
ElCobroi 0 
JBlanco Encalada \° 

* Pt. Plata 

Paposo lo 
Jfnattra Sen ora Bay Jo 

.Bavatabayf o1 ^\^ 
Cuohmaloo 
Pan de Azucar) ° 

Chanaral)^ 

Obispo lo^ 

Ingles Bay ~ 1 

port Copiapo 
Salado Bay j ^ i 

ChanarcilloY 

Carrizu 

Huasco/^o^ 

Sarco Bay) 

Chanaralt--, ^ 

Buenos 

Coquitnbo Bay \ ^ 

-■^•POPn^tU' O o iiuiiuiA rj 

Tongoy/- 


MaytencilloV 0 

IllapypCi^ 

Conchall Y 
Cape Tabla N 
Ligua Bay ] 

Quillow 

Tulaparalso ((^T } 

Casa Blancal°, r 
Molipi " 

Jllatanzas * 

Rapel/o _ 
Topocalma Pt.y^.^ 

Pt.Lora JLolo 
JUataquito 
Confltitucion/^^vfXaS&^v^ 
Cape Carraraaf 
Cauqur' 

S.Carlosj 
Itata Tome 


s 

Jloel’i or New Concepcion 

Aruuco liuy ,— 

Araucoj^ 
Nacimiento 
Tucapel Bay 

Imperial B.A 


^CAl.E OF MlaiES 

5iOO 300 




IM) 


Population 
Aica, square ini log 


uVavarnu /. 
y^Aa esau B. 
(-v Wollaston /• 

o t 

0°^ , 
T 1 


36,061,000 

7,196,158 


SOUTH GEOllQlA 

KekerevlLL sj^ a,Bo » 


West 


Lorjritude from 17 Wasliin^ton. 


'East 























































































































































































































145 







































































































































































































































































(ENGLAND) 


piTior iW' 


mam 


■AP.TOTI V \l'l' 


Stnmfn 






aoajinni 


* n 


wssi® 


pp=f==^* * > 

' i w y 1 - 

Vr—/ 

1 ' r* 



>^Sv id Rfifltes 

01LX2 } f"* 


& 

a /:p 

ffl 

J0S 



~rrz= 


1 7 

ea^ 

^Ca 



a 





'60»'5®mV\V’a 

3y1 |T | / (fcb >fllf ai' \ w A 

I&vSl 

ilPP?l 


V - -V^-v <^ 


L- 



146 
































































































































































































































































































































































































































72 ° X ongltade jfast from Washington 7 s 5 

148 


































































































































































































I 



149 













































































































































150 

































































































Or 































































































































































































































Or 

10 

















































































































































































163 






























































































































































































































CotfrV 


J’ctit 


etfitfCfa, 


III 


m 





154 































































































































(FRANCE) 




Gf\_ 

HopVjios). 


. Grand*, 

. Uopii'il 


156 





































































































































156 


































































































































































































































































































































CITY C 


BERLIN 


Scale ; 3| Inches to the Mile. 


of Colours 


Explanation 

Postal Districts 


Tramways 
Public Buildings 
Underground Railway 






* • • 




,»• ' 4 - 








[TtT> o 


u'/ ! 'V 


Zciiioft 

►aZo/iA*^ 


r-'r 


lint/. 


Jb.tfiA. 


.XJuvuli*. 




Tfi~m K.~m!oliili 


Jl 1*1 Maria 


SJvicl 


Jiai^ 


\mm 



mt 

\w2Sk 

nwi 2 

C\8BK 

IflrSl V* 

"mxMf, 

Tu 

llr*l!l * 











































































































Or 

CO 

















































































































































































































































































































































161 
















































































































































































a> 

*o 



map or 

CONSTANTINOPLE 


\lV at trx aitixn 

g&Cu- 


FcfiVt 

Jcom 




y^ZJo.i'*ai 


UaJtu 


I'in'll 

linse) 


men'. 


JLutOhuJc 

JfaluJcU 


|£jEgag| 









































































































































































































163 


























































































































Z 0-543 * 

icfin'm 

it:« j i , 


'rjrpTP 


'MW/m 


1SSS4I5 




jpsifcS | 


3§il 





'V\ 

\yO 



104 



























































































































































































Villa, 


G alio 


<Cemetery / 


r«*v»i 


tignano 


ftrmuif 


'Ponte. deW 
Immaoolatinat 


(Italy) 











































































































































































.166 






















































































107 

























































oa 

oo 





b d^sliat fSiml&arifurtiii & 
Vats ofXhtJ'ribeJp ~ s ^ £. ■$ 

fJ&fa&h ai&Gaull * 


Consulate' 


le^rg^a 

^a&jTthei 


iJhttat 

A^Lacc of 
jifraja- 


[ic/ur» 

\ndcnc& 


S;tpwSiojis^ 

.{l^hnoiio 

3 BaSx *5 Oaliariyelt^ 

a . i/.the 7 -,ternul Gaie ) 

8 \\^<rpfdcnlratci—^-j:: 


^ohmma^c 

XQrnbS *' i|| 


rJJbme of “ "5 


thk Chain 


[Muristar 
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kwcOtvMp 

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jTomb~oi* Sfjani^T^* 


^ZZWat/roriGotelf 


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el Aksa. 


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Greek. hMieriean, 


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Tobruk~o~ -JW> Fj „ J) J 


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ElMahazi 0 

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> or v . ■ n 


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I Wj)*™/ X«4 « a /i^ OKHl \ $f\ Sb<l , . 0 KhU ' ai 7^1 Ghor 

---““gSssabaShJnamJh cl Gbarblil^^S^ MaiVora t? -«„«>, SbeW> el Amry 4 

hoi.i.h J ° Rnnnmah v / 



DaMch/ 


u - - {J 

° Boomnah jj q ^ 

Kasr el Heyet o E[ £ ftb B( 11 j Salame 1 
Darah ^ Mellahah el Ben# 
Wady Mahadjeh Moqhara 


/ ^ J r\ 9 O 

Hattyeb el Ghala Aboo Marzook °Beer Leoook 


28 


24 


Anjila 


Jallo 


Tlmatu Sebklia 0 

L I 


Mrupum J 


El H.'glilah El Gbatara Kaf _el_Ala»orIyat . 'i-vcr 

oisiS OF GAR AH Goobatar Awara .lirktt Vj^'VJU OAtfeeh // rn. 

-• .. c .„a„».o o £ Komi/\ BI.Hin?<Ve. .:-. __ \\-in/S. 

Aboo Saghara FAYOOM vjfcientowT" -Y& *«$¥, „ 

n v A At ElHadeidao 0 BfE! i* 1 S.0 0 E k)\J \pr 

Abu Muharyo MaU ^ neu oJ^«“ I_ 0 F 
Ishuekha oMandisha „ , Ti i i rr 

Kasr Baooiti o nZata M I D(U L K J3 (i YI* l„„ v , 

OASIS OF bahrieh ° Am Keli<J oMinieh\w5 araalo “ d J;Mescmmki-& 

Hass° 0 Uxor o Jjdali ^ |\]) Ta n eh om elineD Ras'Sh nkhaw* 




\ovn 


oShebr.^ Cali 
w l' °*ic 


Lilalizalehc^J^Beeret 

lb 1 o Roomaneh She! 

Kantara j yjj ' , 
,oE 1 Aiobek -j®, l\ 
__ Ancient 
\BilUr Inbrs^ffi* 
t>Mabook 

- ——oAli 

.Memphis 


Kaf o 
Ittery ° 




.haltiles 


Hagar Zaliue 


20 


O Tayzcrbo 

OASIS OF 
KUFARAH 

o 

Gebabo 


SOF BAHRIEH -l\TS , . 

Hass° 0 ITror o Ji-lali v > j\|) Taneh or Tehlieh nkha X„ . 

LITTLK oasis ET Abiil 2— - - yb ;1 _ _ . . — -4," ~~~* 

Es Zahabi Liieani °-! Welad.Noayr Ra }^;hnxah ^ 

Zaline o , ... ,, MellaweeRl DayrVA^llonnes . ^ 

. „ Ata cl Wadi Mandar^,'\ „ .. , SW«A» A 


y Ain el Kadeirat 


iZajr T(rbeit Q ^ 
B«Wo oMaan 

\ ' WM$ R A B I A , 

o Ain M alihe^b o o Ar 

-Al^aba 0 E ;‘'SLf °Elj"u!nelylmeh 
AiSttposa UaateR MVH oFort Rs. <<? 

VAklMno Sooki ira Akablji ft.p £ T It E A 

Ku. -U° y% Mcdauara ° 

rJebe/ er Rfil>, a h . 

: ““ as Beer er Rf iera 

5'ULA fl^ Dzat elHaj 0 
o (^JKad. ~ v * 

El Ain & I El M 


Stony Ptrxln 


o Wel»lt 

J.Subeiha 0 j,;rawl 
> TRIBES OF ANEZEH 


A1 fcl oMaV 

'Seer ; -^fS’ierm Pl< 
abk°\ uVtanJtartak 

•<*#($ 


R 


° Meska&eh 

Jof o 

Kan 


a.oA'' 


y ^^r*^*'** - 1 ‘ p - 


• A 

Teb0Oko iw> rrf » 

. .tf V —' 


B I 

o Ft Fejer 


Nesla, 


Bir Boodll o 

o 


OASIS OF 
Ain Sheik 0 


D 


I jini.i'i'-'-ill Dayr>S&^ , .* onnes • 'iTuueel'ah , 
cl Wadi ri Vmilsr*' '^^^^JAffauileh shaitu nn E 

o , , J ° I? 1 M -^?E1 Kossavr M„ie tel Abd °_\ V Q S1 

° NekebelFarij Beni i>- ^V\ t) en i MukammeA-F, .P \, i o 

° Kasr Farafreh Pioiiki<b\\- ■ T-i*VS J.Abcos e/i’bbC 

F FARAFREH _^^—^ -—17—I 

° Bir Dikker | Shekh Hcreedwo - Sae'lieed"” Safadyee itb 

Q. ShindaweeiFj^^lj A j,j lnun | o m hbetat o |\ 

Hornemann HI .* 1 Buai Bu el _ 

Ammonite Hills Kharashaf Kasi'< 1 Lebekh uenrtera v -’>> — • 

t Kas e r 1 0 Jinde ' • Un m Btkhara +» \] \> 1* E K^’VVE G Y T 

O E R 7 Ain Amur 0 0 ° Me de enet H a hno //o Lti^or 


"'Y El Akdar 0 o 

^Ras M"t‘am»icd i&jn. Akbiaen Birket el Moadham J.Misma 

- ~ MuwaylAb ™ o o Tetma o Hu/ 


Mhottah tania D Teiieda 0 ' Temple 0 o Madura . Rerekat o/.Didymea 

Mhpttahtultla o Moots 0 El Khargeh’ 0 Ain Tautl ^ , U AphrouRe 

Allen,kuiso ALaaara A Asfoon 0 \\ ^ \ 

Resell feld o 


_\0 Akuuuu \ uni 

Kauwumi o El AAvaiu^x y Gouay 

_ii^i^^o&lnl^r “ Ytoauf 

j* Ksr5h Dend°e™ W ^ VK«»* or Gen 

it «a ■alAaraiiK /n -*r 


*? ytt *■.%$%/,% El Akdar 0 

. , \;y r -=gSf*ff l c ‘ *■. Akhiaf 

^Fort of El IMnv/ayVab ^ ° ° 

,£ ^L Fort Zibad; A El Maheer 

rm Au/<i/u>s S\wak % o p : 

’“S • Kas A\}^\ I \r-E\lilum-yir v 

Akff' N|<J " t\EI Bada ' 

-? Att,n<r ^l/ e r-m 7.eha,de\ x o 

i^P t\>rt Duwiiyi5 “ a ^vemetah 

JTW Fort Wlg4 MarWat ° 

J.dnlar 


Jeer Ukla 


Gubbe 0 


- Bulak o . Asfoon o \X o 

OASIS OF LAKHEL OASIS OF KHARGEH ' A] A “compast- 

. ,, , Esneor Esneh° \lo 0°"'r as 'o 

»S Mnusuf Edfoo 0 \\ El J'"'* „ N 

^ t. , ~To. Hamailoon °\ '5 KoomOtnbo 

greater Basis 0 BeHs Spri n% A - ak 

'**3001° loChiuie 
■ C00K 1st Cataract / U Assonant ct « 

-Elloua 1 H 


Telrna 3 J.Huhtan 
0 siirb el Bekra J, /rnan 

0 Dahr el Hamra 
Heejl o 0 Medain Saleh 
Kalaa Zoouirood 5 0 El-allab 

' o o 

Beejar Ghauim 


Karkumai 

^Jiabea 


,El llamx 
Ruma I. 
Akra 



"Bir Zeuierrod 

° Khaidar 

Hedleh o Bfsuti o 

Benakyeh o 


. ,. . . Elpb ° 

j, rt El Wlgh 

il'h°\ayda or Beder 
'Skerm Med toner 
1 \Eus Cel lean 

\ P„x IItouroo 
Werzrt Mubarak 
Rosas .XTyferza Shunah 
\3f trzd T>ehah 
\Rlyhinilone ReeJ 

^Sikiiet uSd'-r el Sorkbtla Ras M,, 0 muei (—■ 0 -ev 

A*' £«Hoos \\ V 0 ?J,^-"%fiaeydo o Medina 

\AV l,Um , .\Aas G»/Aan Ras^reedy V4 
Suv.au Cr.lml'i \ r,«asr^itS^frm Fembb 

Kas We' Dnd-^Soi Cenaeey^ , ^ -- | .'vge ig-^Onaa 


El Haura I 

,o Yk 




■ »,„.e d? >#«■ .b;^^ r^A--!-^R«T-<-'(tu^^“ 0 -Dereybeh 

. ol/o CbaintellooaToenon Hydrenni^jo L , 0 "‘ tl AtifcA \\ Ra» M :dy«N. 0 BedefHonent 

obWco silet Jebeli or Sik^ ^ erm Abu ^ ^ ^ \ ^ 

[(o Darmout t-< | =r-Sgfe>) f' o.,f 'foerm ^ raicJehah\ 0 Rains 

' 1 • <=, John', Reef \ as u , Kht ehan\ K( 




-J-VflA, . r ^ ElTarf 


EGYPT, ARABIA, 
UPPER NUBIA 

AND 

ABYSSINIA 


Sruf < 


ShebbAlooUo ^ »v, oDbisco Siltet jeuen »■ -;-. Kag . ,> 

Dungun Springer 0 fj f p ar ' n °ut V I . 

G,a, j-^wu , ,kt* k ° °» 

fc«£*r \ I “** 


,> iayarit 


Tosk of Jo , b ~ b “ ‘ XVY Ceiga o 
Cp Aboo Siinbel oA/Adda ^ \ ^ J|’,>nuyi»i *« 

\ Serra Gharby o//o^ n )f r Vi £/ Moorat W.beinl el Faij 
O — ■ ■ ■ Pebr(.»os \ ^ u ' nfl/rd/Zi^w 

Grrat Catarac t _ _ 

^ o/^SeUe Hadutl WbW* ^ 

OASIS OF SELIMAH BATAN ED°HAJ AH \ ^ -C 

Ruins o Qknie //q \ k v 


£5 


/Augoosab 


Srdinga, Sudenza or 
Ain el Agheia o 


^ t ^ 

*> /V \ U 

W.Donia 


Dal S'ar •or/z t ~r 
-</Ferket 

‘KOT 

^ W.Dovta ^ 

Soleb ^\':“reb^ Jebel M ggjdgrjta 

Gil^igote 

1 M ' 


ic ^ShabKvmihtre -+£\ 

, J.Salaka ^ rr* T i* 

Bir el tybeh j Sohaunit E 1 JCR \ R a , Row 


Jtoke-7 /'\:, d 


Tinareh deOel 

■r^ d T‘^m* 


i? 


J.Agage 
ultra,, 


nab 


-*w»e -— 

N 0 


8CALE OF MU^S 
25 50 . TOP_150 


200 


Nosh! lY\ra 
OzloratJ ^^ 31 O 


F5GYPT 

Area,squash miles 1,152,943 
Population 17,419,980 


Marakaor New ^ D. 

y DONG OnB a ,J. \ -i V>eS«J 

Urubo Oorbi ° ideroe orWerawe. o iV-^ a ^ft raC 4 \V-iAbu i >is 
Handak oi Haudah oA\ >; \ S Jj' Cy \ S / M \1' Ji. 


o Zeghawa 




16 



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3 


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?Abu Hau 


Handak oi Haudah _ 
Basleyn 
K.odok 

EJ-el-Kab o 


Old Dongol 
Dabbe o 

Khar el Khanim - Q 

BrAbuGerado TV.Selemat-. ^. nr</t 
Jmbellill® Abu Samood o Ban , uda 0 

c . „ . W.Abu Gha,hi,\ V El Egedeho; 

fj.rMsiter 0 RUor el x,ebbeuk 0 g» ’ ’ 


Hk Ge ,tf/K' 

E/fiocS'^ 

ki o W.Daffelh^yr- 

Hauewad Ml. or Jobel i 

m K~n~~r "'hindibHi?\Skerm Abu uVrllaiA'S, 

\£>J.un, A abnt ° Nabesb li ^ ^JsSherm A^tbaM 


Ra* Abn Fatima 

Ran Juzreel > > 

^ .Merta Slat or lit 
Shtrm Khar at 
JClba Cape 


Myffl/kty Merm Gulieten 
A l Gore nl Meroob 


Jebel Souban 

0 Sefeyaen 

Kobab Wells _ 

Hejer WeU« 

o 


28 


Zebeideh 

Klioleys°o eyba Makhrouka 
Bir Aufan 0 0 Limoun 
,,,, ,o MECCA o 
Jiddab y Leynlck 


Shigre 


Well °j bMac,u>a 

Jebel T J la \ h :n 

I Merza Sal a*, 

Sotirba Uj§ \j ia i, Sualdu 

Htferza Arrt ka . 

J,Sa.'al< IMerza Fed t 


E RT 

med W.Alob 


jjferza Der or 


-,M ash ri, Dehesh 
,Ka>i 
DEfifuej 


i -- J, q ^ w // Q Sagadi ^ —w*-.-/ \ 

BlrSimrie Ko “ s , \ El Matantmeh /’°A4sun r„U'U\ 

Reside ice of the Jeraiad ° Abu Delua% ^OKiibooshl Ralmky. I / I 


--- - ^ ni .. ♦ t. ^/°KiibooshI 

Res deuce of the Hauauin o o C 5 5 Shen« ly 

Bir Elai o “ “ * ' 




Kabkabla 0 


\ Kobl e 

0 Fasher 


12 



A R 




Rotoke 


/ 


A 


Kaiiub 


^ Orgod 







Omshanga 


■ 

/ 


U GaffitTa“o“'° ° Ha»b/ba 

R Tl HIT A TVT KjfTuajKowMt, W.el Abbasfj 

tY U AN el VlanagehoTl. 

IT.. Abu f vir Abn Zeirivy Moie" 4 -nk 0 \ 

^ ^ AbuShoka 0 \ 


El (ibeid 



0 Deladim 


VAbn Harras 

V 


W 

/ 


« 

/ 


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Shekka 


# 

y 




-__—„— Tamani etit 

Gebra 5 Surerebo 

TJ V 

derma' 


* n 

Ji? 

te 


o Zerawi 



A? Aiferza ffee ‘y« _ . ; .. 

- \Merza Sheikh Earned \, armosa Kebeer 

Shlngat or Singat \Merza A itah , 

OnguabMts. { +\MerzaJ.,h Bare ** 

B1SUAEEEN ARADS srza Mar orKrin&ti 

\ Wady Gabopt N Mtria Ilalhalud \\ 

Abeldieh^-f £Z m< *m3t< JMgyer ft "V V^Oi’.ro/. or Debe 

FR ‘ / 4-0%/ A^ -XildSoV" 

ri Mekhen^y^^'^ 6 ^^^^^ 6 ^ Shabaj^Irisa Gendedat 

OASIS OF OBXK _ , 

^aooaguev PGengeraD Spnng 

\ Damer oyNafadik /f&k' ^,Tt% 

El AUSfo^Woj* N»g» fM** "W* m -%m. 

JJS3? ^^JebeUangbe^y A hST 


24 





t.1 rem 

y Q el Hoffl,V(«l^ *uuv w X X 

el Neben o Jjuajm /Ar Wold Medineh \Sa 
Nebbelet 0 _ , / _ \Waliya 3 w r l!ina ^\ 


’ Deit 


q Tasslnt 


-4 


QGagamude 
Ngaen L j/Hellet Burun ° 

<T Hi; HelletUrK 





irat,Teklai Jlarbr. 
Ttrouba 

ftratCA \Mcrza Vereza 

\\Melhigde 
b \\ \Garn Adef 

\ur'iahibarek 
\ P Ss ^p/’erra Melhid 
Fysbet M\^\fias Koba 

Arwa\ \ Harrat yr U ra 

- x Y a 0 Lobo I, 
jvfri\la’ 




Kar,<5 


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16 



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V 


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^ O 

el Ghrab ° 'vl'® 

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Denaib o 


Kb^or Do?eb ^ 
. JJiGeraud 

A?/ j. 

Gb/ab el Aish 


V 


■Hooky 


o{4flOTk Village j Belbateu^ 

YcfAy \ ■ uM r°°r®-. 

fast from Washington UI 


Wadi elbaki 
BUT 


103 


107 Longitude East from Washington 



o / Mesa'gi»\ 

iuMaskalo 0 J 

go / Tlascalare o 0 T>il<JJ 

r V ^ y-oZ?[° BelbelO c o Lalibala \ 

. Sir Sana ] ^ Eiajt _ Tc ,\ at: claO oLaktaloi^^ 

o Gaso gd^a j 

w\- JD n A / \ r~ Saldrit /CGatera oR 


tv - 
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0 '£5,o 1; */^r» oKoterArj 

^ ^ Beni ShoVolo 7a , ba Wa5a Mt. tA * . ° Woh. 

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^ Fawoudtr 


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J-BMIedaffa ^ oLakakallam 


C M 


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Belbasau < 


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Birblrsa 

A/t. Goro C/ien 

WALAGGA 


o . T <o ° W0K U 

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VoSuSltr^oia. 0 D ebra Libano* 

Anafo^ x’" lJ Maschella ° Ankobar 

O * Finfinnieo Angolallao w 

Kobboo ... j 2-2j\ o Golba 

Haratuo Fitch«_o 


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124 


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> fc 7 v (? 


p t/ 

Strait ^ 


PE-CHi-LI .6 ilia-tao h 


'5fl M h 
a » £ c 


COB 

B A 

,<>V Chuan]g-nhunl 

Sir JnMoll'n ?. 


jilouyhton Bay 


ulf of Corea 

/ Eg \±rsC.Duroch 


[•okougea 



■■J/"’ sir Js.JJalBs M 

Hoang-ho a Ta ' i ''AA)>g-chow fgo Harbour Arct ,belago• 
rShllow K. oy7 Alcesle I. 






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former mouth tof 

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Gulf of 
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An’uoa 

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Zlu^~Say 


o Quahg 


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JKieiJ-yang 

K-ien-aiDg 

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f>ur( blehilU y\ 

CkKaicarsintaor \_y ‘ ^ 

OrmlDooChooIs-^- /Mau 





L/JV y/Ol / r . i • 

r • liapabSo /fiTosAt” 


e Ulng-ya.^ Hing-wli AA 

5 y ^A-r, ' Pir.g-W^ fo 

Gt-P ug ° K (Sui ;'Cu«&-cyj/’(. Malheiol 

\ o^Yong-'Jnl ^ Chin-Chew Hr. 


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fo&J p a -chu-* aix 


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f ^ d A. M 5bhovra 

Q T? y| Fonzinjcn \ O S 

^ A Mi4zusa>vaoj/k / 
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O/j*. o • mr~niu s 4i 

/-J'Nagasaki /, \r orrCamainc-. _ 

^, a /.Uyi/uy Tiksna . ^ 


177 













































































































































































120 


» TU UC/IC' . 


15 


25 


AUSTRALIA 

& TASMANIA. 


iN Hibernia Sh. 


. 

J «t a , .. 


) CoAmhem 

— 5WCi Alexander 
^Caledon B. 

? a Grey 


SCALE OF MILES 

SO 10O_200 


Australia 

Area_8,944,658 

Population . - ----- 9,300,000 

Tasmania 

Area_56,2)6 

Population ------ 


. 126.220 


Sou-ley Should : J 

> -y T°o-, 


ISori 


.. u¥ yb *‘ c Q „ *• s y e<? A • y 

*' \v*. ?■ 7i? e ;*■ ' ‘ 

^ -at: ^ 


^hport ^ DUraeU S 44- J* , , n rr- /a *"» feraBd 

/*-"—\ TableLand- Blue-mud. Wooduhl. 6? UJLF OF -VigAt 7s 

\\\ / Stewart ^ 

\ \ f r 1 A P D r 1 rr L * - , 


Batavia Pt. 


I Or/or a Xesa ■ ~ 

j\Shelboit?n* B. ^ 

/ \ J C. Grenville 

Duj/pbtn £t.ry*% r c Kremple£ay 

J v <: ' \ SYymoi/rA C. <i A. 

J’era 2T<f. ( AJoyd sS *" Direction 

\dr?>,. 1 Wi n ht 7. 


)')// r' 

^j{/ ^Mt.Cbchburn 
| i/aspf 


X^I Wollaston Mt 

yetc castle W> 


sj V tlfc * i* T> 

5\ " jk Xv-/ A-V J 

- '1- /#■ /V * Wellesley /s f" 

gj Paly rr. ^ /j ^’^>Tr»><wniK S (on Vv, 7 ijonia 7 . Ls 
"5 ^ | ^ A 6 * A? |/P?V>. < — / »Bo mti/ul l.f~ 


S^e* Palmen^Up ^ 

^-^C^TerV. HteMil. .‘j ***¥ 

^raare^/^T 0 jVTWlasA 0 '"** lbu Dttion “ 

vj5" l7 J W® ^‘Ui. Gr ou „\ • D,a "“'SA. 

'W# , \c.Grafton v_ M 


e'S^V- 


Dividing Rat/go 


Margaret «• t' 0 ' 11 .!*- 

v c«y 


600 J 


P. 


T»1 


a *P« A 


^ A>. Joanna Spr 


-< A * A " *■ 


*aZ°4; ! > -S 

p °"r pi £j£S», 

-,V>,. a ’ J ^ 

£ ><> 


. ,nt.Mliller 

I 

o 0 o /tft. IVi'/son 

S®^ Spr * £. Isabella 1 

1 


£. White* 


Sturt Plains odjowells Cr. Sta. 


Short Range^^^ a Mn t> s Cr.Su. 
Murchison Range o ^j> McDouall Range 

forster. Rn 

r ^iu.Atu^uu. 

_ C4 

Barrows Cr. Sta. o 


. ^ yC.Gra/ton w M 

RfJJefiier^jiiy Af_f 5 V (. . Handy Is . Coringa /». » ^ , • ' 

\ \ fi, ( c,/I vA , Jfu 3<i c lainr 

irt\Frere Mt. *& \Dt.Cooper ^ Herald r I # 

-A V *Double C. _ W C “ y ' L «v*»W A 


Buhou SJieai 


A 


locklanU 


% 

Mt.Macpherson 




StAel O' 


X^^^' e9 ^T^t Mt - B nn ee 1 ■ Mts 

^-4^/i / s 4000 3800 Ophthalmia Mts. 

-o. £7^, m > 

N| 




T 


C. Cuv, er ) 


Kolaina 

Plains 


Geoeirofif. V,n, 

~~ik*r2. 


sco 7 . 


^ a: 

Vj f 1 Weld spr. ____—- 

j * _ _\ -f |»» 

Oi i. /luffusta ^ 

AimberUU Htt- 

^•rlSvs^ v? f .M m ' 

k* S( lpf%fw M*. Murc ^To ,. n 

i r6ak6r, ^5'^ »- S 

..y nc t East Mi 


L 


Tropic of Capricorn 

__ Pfred& 

fj?Marie Mts. 

# N 


| Centra/ Mt. Wedge 
Ehrenbery 


ifc c Native Well 
^AninonV 8 Well 


I Mt^Standish 
o( 

J^oxbouough 


Aub^Tarn- 

Loke 


^ 1 

Permanent Water! 


..Christoph 


7 J t ! 

... Sutherland Mts. ' I 

-* V ,A , X. HJil 30 ^ 

I •-" 


Wusgraee Mts. Ayers Mts. '^"^tharlotte Waters Sta. 

t l .i, v\ 


Mt.WhitbiTZ 


I I'v ■*. ..,, 

I' o M 


i 


A 


L I 


»■ *•«» 

0 ,t a,, VpA./,.,.»• ^ 


t}.t.Pfs 

py '<.. 


“ r (/u 


Wurley o 


t rana 




Euela 


H 6 ^ ,0» 

' C ^lakeLefroy 

Cburtm oc>’ 


iaie Coxeen 

' X *-+**. .... 


pen®^ 


S c i 


Chlmpering. 
Ku na o A) 


400 to> 


o Clerking ^ ( 


jw« e ;V, 

X A Cock- 


,- 9 


Alii 


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Oj ft, Cf- 


<7 u n( )e 


35 


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o 


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p 






fe a,l 


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er /«. ^5^g««w«* /V\ PurnfauM- 

Barren I. ^ \Xby\..\i<^^^ n ders /. f 

Ti- . C- tWrnfvJ^^^ Barren }. 

noolnorth & Pesr Pt J vxc>®,SA™ Panics Sir. Id. 

Arthur R.\ Ringarooma 

Ordnance PiklttUMminS l _ 




/* 


173 


153 


Ordnance Pl.'iBhainiWit ,, ,- 
-. V - ■AKjBfrty i'ork 

Pieman ^Vi-We8t?,urv- 

\ |C; . 

: Macquarie Marb\^ 4 e:^ 

Co Sorell r 
Tt.Hibbd 
IMontgomerj 
JZocky Pt.^ 

Bathurst 
-Port Davey 


ikjG 


^etown 1 

Ices ton / 

ratrick lid, 
Cft. Swan Pojrt 
\Preycinet 
Peninsula i 

t^rH. 

Z?«?. 




<reZ' a P- / 

-^“opf ] Peninsula t pirate 

!?**>»» * r r Fillar 


jS. W. Cap 6 -yy cy OJ^ -»r 

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Pekin 


-LL. 


lao° 


East 


1 40® 


150° 


100 ° 


Fien-siu orffulf f. 


■ch 


Tsi-i 


J3. af*9 


,-s # 


* Kai fung / 
. Hoal-nganl 

f °Q 

Nankin, 






H 




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$ 4 OF Sado . 


ilog 


TiingkA 

^? B orek . 

Arch, 

TELLO W 

Quulpart-i • 

SEA ^ , < 

Yakunosima 
HChusan l. 


, Fcnziii 


fjVancketb Bay i g 

telling 

. •* 'Tu-ping-san 
FORMOSA 




jKtung 

yllain 

kTtnki 




^nng-chow^ 


a p^i 
“ok 4. 


15k. 


5*> 


/JAPAN 

[c Kono 
Mlto 

ISLANDS 

r Kind —- 


9e 




r 4 


(/ 4 


Loo choo < o°^'” ma *® Bonin 


c/too 


2 V 

W^j/e .( 7 a/uit<w /*£ 


O It 


’-Peel It. 

Arzobispb Is.; 


Bashes Is. 


.Borodino In. Bailey Is. ’ 

J3M °P R -. Volcano- 

_ _Is 

Ibrejos 

Douglas 22,.. * 


• Margaret-Ii^. 

%'.et ISL 


& 3 S 7 CaptB^e 

e JBL T N A 

'fyAmphitrite Is 
, BjttMe/ J», g t 

SEA fa. 


ft Babuyan Is. 

Engano 

PHILIPPINE 
0 Cafand«an«a 

Hot IST/J^yieyt 


BalabacTil a- i 

BnUmhangan UJjSzxmbMai 


Tabuandz C> 

~ ni 


to- 


$ 


Surigao I 
Segueira 


r^r*v» 


^ r - _ Bon] 
Jdod^Bd 'Macassar 

c>Kangeang 
1 W!» c, u ,H ta ^° 

wJ. S- t7~. temksh -s; 

■ v ^ ^ Sandalwoo 


W/r BdJ • ^ c 

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BnuroQy 

Banda 


, \£Q{yBouton 

■F,\-F lores Sea 

o,,., W«“' r o 

c3^ *6^ 


Forfana “Gramput la. 


A n s 

■ Jfdfcua 




iff 


• 0-* ' 


Ofra /«L 
..Zos Jardines or 
‘Marshall Is. 


Isl. «« wc i«?» 7 r?. 

Mariana or 

''iGaguan 

Lad rone Is, ,w * r V i “ m 

'’rinfan/tteypan 
n /?o£a 

^ Guam 


Uluthia or 
Mackenzie la.. 


Elivi Is Uap 

i /«.*• ’sJUdtslc las Is 

Pelew 8lM« ? « , 

Islands 


Y““ & co </ 3 Ylinqanao 

v -s^y^< St>Aup\ sUttc .: St. Andrews 

Celebes^ j/^VuX- »*«**• 


■Helen R . 

, c J/ 


'..Carteret R. 

Hy- di I p ^ 

^0»9^ Otl St Davids IsE 

** •-- ~^Mysory~Tsl 


Ceram 


L , A ^ qA. n# 0 

i 


JPet 7«, 




,rru 


0' 

’/Frimor Zaut 
'F Frad Henr_ 

A RAFURA SEA 

. WT ootV KtJBE^Tol 

o'Q' 


4 


* Folger Isl. 


170° Xongitude from i eo°Gre^n\rlcb 


170° 


160° 


West 


A r 


Deeien a • Decker 

Volcano 
Camira 


Zamira „ . Decierta 


Wake hi. * 


Tar quin 


St. Bartholomew 


T IT 


Marvel hi. 


Cure hi. 

Pearl «k •. 
Hermes JL 


Bunker hi 
‘Delaware R. 


Lisiansky Isl. - 

Maro hi. ’ 


2 Brothers 


140° 


,4 


Xay» m /»/. 


Gardner hi. 


Wake R'. 


-a 


Lutke It 
„ Swede Is 

miie la - ,, Bndarby IF- . 

O ( • TP»/*an 7 j. Roi'alista h.Andtma Is ..o # 

^ A-.' n e | s I a :.n d 

Kama h, *** •» 


. C Dunkin R. 

lid Its Is. • ^ ^ ugust ine Is. 


Escholtz Is.:;. ;-P^o»y 

Brown I ange . ; f Hew }’ 

_ Schanzls^ _ 

0 Ocean / a f 1 ^ 




n a a c» TiV* 

Hgarik Ualan 0 + Baring /. 


*>4 


f v, 

New Britannia Greenwich Tel. 


A 


A/. 


• • O XJmlra/fy /». rjanavsr 

/r.W 


Arch 


■ j ^SN. •. ’Ahgarris or F> ad Is. 

Krencn 1s. N X' ^roene Is. .1 tsman Jsl. 

* \Boukah. ^ 

Ifj- ^ CvffoewatnwV 
7\^>terfja l >3 ^Qhoisel hi. 


- - .Torres Strait 

j D t 8 c Hjl f ' r3r *<~\0’ ^ Cape Rodney 
AmArmTfay ) y* -F c 


.'-ST r-T • -v V ^'\bougatttvu e i. 

Stewarts’ Mota 

jQudjTdJ V\/^*v ° ° nfniain oKenn 

r Papua ^ iVau* Georgia ^ ^ Sta. CrU| 




tcT 


Barrow hi. 

H. W.Cape 


Cuvi i 
Shark 
Steep JB& 

Gerald tou 


Gape 


,eveq u 
feJucX: 


E 


IBav 




^ktu/a/i 


— 


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AZakt I 


nadcu 


• Austin 

BALIA 




v %. 


}C.Amtym 


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’root E/iana 

.Carpentaria) 


'<fa 


*Or£ 

\ C. Direction 
\Pr. Charlotte B. 
•\Cape Melvil 


°koreebj, let. | s | and 

\ o “jeoMet lei. 

9 , 


C 

Cape Flatte -y 


o n 




"Burket 

TIOBTH 


.V 


trim, /». 

^ Cape GrOj "ton ^ 


Mellieh Cays 

E ' A 


i&^, r iT“° S “r.T 

Torrea la.. Tuiopm 
' 0 Bank Is. 

r New ft .1 r . 

t J . . & . /Vo o Aurora Isl, 

Espintu SantoCJ q Q ^ 

jtfullicollo C \j ° Yat 


x , ^ . Sandwich M Asau Grp.Q^A: 

BamptonSh.. X • Hebrides^ r0iwng0 

Avon fsl. . ’ ■“’t.Zr'j-. Tanna let. o Kantavu 


Es4^,ALI.Aj 


A ^ 0C J 

Ae 


SO V 

Lake Eyrr 

A U S T R A L<4yA ( 

I^trauklwW*' Tdn ' T 

Investigate*' Gry-'\ fF, 

Eyria Ptnx £>\ 

->*-< 

9»" > 

- 

Ci^NfiZlhuntbe 


(qujee: 


3;. Vumber land- h. , , ; 

V. . • A070 7«L 

V.. : Hothamberland Is. * • 

■2i32L>/>j>«r jBay • 

JTadstone ~ 
j)Gt. Sandy I$U , 
yborough 

uMorelon Bay 

~ ” *} hi. 

Jshoai B. - ■*» 




r w AJL ] 


A .,^1 Howe lei. 

* 1 all Pyramid 


Murray 

»Bendij 


oiqscEKa^* 

, , vit 
Montague 1st. 

f wofold Bay 
I .Howe 


Sviyth or 
Cornwallis hi- 

,W,u r 

" v '~ Vearls% 

—cv 

.Romanzoff Is, 


*Jb aurelle hi. 

O c 

.Bartholomew It l 


tvdxa ls. •. / 

tquittq. is.-, 
Odxa Is. 


' r 

*Atlantic Isl! 


r 


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.• • Daniel hi. 3 
/ ‘ ‘Redder hi. _ 


/ ‘‘Mulgrave Is. 

/ 

'Boston l. * Hu lei. 

’Matthew hi. 
Cook :hl. 

filbert- Islands 

Co Howe hi. 


Hameless hi 


Ocean Isl. * -Sydenham hi. 

Drummond hl. % • Byron Isl, 

Botch lei. ■ Fraud, lei 
Hurd 


stnan jsi. 

Lord Howe’s 1st. 

I. 


ti or 
idy hi 
l Is* 


• Hifu 

^ SMare 


Hr. 


Johnston'Isl 


• Isl. St. Pedro 


Barber 

Cent r a 


. New Island 
'Phoebe hi. 


■v. 


'^ Arthur W. ^. \/Bi denary 1 , 1 . 

Phoenix I s', ’ ph *?'* !,t - 


Jfecker 

Bird Isl.' 
Nuhau 


'W-'hon hi. 


-E 


C 


I F 


. H o njo 1 u 1 u£j l) ^ ,J 

- lariai’ . 


/ Saihatang Isl. 

/ / Fanning 


/ 


Hawaii or , f , 

;0whyhe*y%} s I a n d s 

>e OjF t-oa 

N 


I 


UNI^ElJ 

SA^ FRANCISC 
STA 




-___Tropi c_ 0 ‘ 

Sandwich 


. Ma-i<* Losjat 

Co<)p+r hi. * 

Cancer__ 


Manuel 


y/n e s i a n A r c h i p' 
r Palmyra Isl. 

Neib York hi. 

hi. 

Q Christmas Isl. 
Equator 


New hb * 
loca Cora . 


Rodrigues R, 


^ St.Aygustim Isl. Gardner Isl, / 

Gran Cocalk -Spcic enhl. / „ 

Netherlandish. Tiacyhl. / / 

■ •Be Peyater lel.Jilt / Un'i o O 

- m cJL. 


Ellice 

Islands 


Sophia Isl, 

•Charlotte Bk. 

'Rotuiru ,K 4 

G °’<iJto / Sa *?“°.<iSa 


la ‘- . _••• . , a! *< / :'utuila hi 

Hunter i,i. FijilsHands /.< M, 

Vamalcvn^Z - Keppel Iel. Navigator Is 


Mihailoff 

ireiv -reSxKS' Mare isi. . . 

CaUdokmtf ' w, dnoU'tel ^ V 

i- °f ~_ 

- "*/ 

Ca/>***n* Cl'' jjJT^r 




l diet bn Sh. 


Philip Isl. 


/ iVOLUMtAU 1*1. 


/ 


, /' Opolu O 

/ : 1 'p. 


Naussau Isl. 

noa or Suwarrowls. 

'utuila Isl. 


Eastern / Amagura 
# V Group/ 


K a nta-vf I^t l jj . . l& lu FGrwp l 


fsl.' : 0nb h. . 

Tongxitabu 0 «Zixi 

/ Islands. ^«V 

Minerva Reef 

T H 


Norfolk Isl • 


Curtis 


-C 0 

^Auckland ^ 

w I^fEa* Caps 

North IslandX^, i/Wry Bay 

-y- 




^ Cap« Newell. _ 

Palliser 

C.FouluH.nd^Wt } _ 

}-y t S ’ A Campbell 

South Island ^EhrUtchurch 

^ Milford Sd*J3r \ Banks Pen • 
Resolution/-J 

H? MIL/ v,vi ^ 

Inverc^fet Yj0 >ort 0t ^° 

^^~^k/Molyneaux Bay 
Stewart hi.fa 


Raoul or 
■ Sunday Id. 


al \ Kermadec is. 

Bsperance hi K 


Three h. Palmerston Isl. 


: Walker Is. 


\ Brocks hi. 


oMaldon Isl. 
sSiarbaek hi. 


tftanihik? / s 


Peecado *&roningen Isl. 

•’Jtoggtwki.n h l. 

Barnnau Isl, 

W zterland Isl, 


A 

H,au or jfaeae lai.- Marquesas Is 

.* akahsta or Marehand *” * —- 


’PenrA»» rb Nakahsta or Mar chav d 

- Caroline I,. Ugpog a r Adam Iel. 


• Tf bur ones 


t Sf* G ‘ or l>“ f’- .Honda I,. 


Beef 


.l/ahuya or Washington 
- Miva-oa or Doniincn 


Vtiegen n ^ r 3 ‘> 

. -Oroia AB«ra la. rf „ T 

*’77ti '.Wittgenstein:• w 

TaAt4^o * fumedu-r '^Anonymous hi, 

.Savage Isl. Aitutahi - Society Is. furnll,, '' 1,1 • oSerle Isl 

&^Jj^ Tr H .-Mil‘ero ^ --J •, .Whiteunday 

00 tt .,77 r., Band. r.’H Glouce *> r J *-~ JArchi fjelago 


_ 1 Ri mi tar a Cock burn Maria Isl, 

Tropic of Capricorn ; XrwT.l. ffhuc T" Q ^' i 7 dvTtdi~~~F“*’■ J,lJ - -— ^AipHerJ?. ___ 

A . . , , «• Juan Bi iUiita incarnation hi, .Elizabeth Isl. 

—..]p 4 


^Chatham /«4. 


pea* 


153 


143® 


11 


13 0 Longitude 'Wad ftom tasfVl Mklng^on 


o c 


E 


Bass I 


St. Pablo si 


Bar^l J” ^ / 5 ft^ C/ ~ , 

Rimitera . Mangaia ' Tubuai Cock i ’ ’ ‘ Bd. Hood hi. 


F I C 


Manor rw«M 'R 




OCEANIC^ 


53* 


58® 
























































































































































































10 Weal 


Lonjfjcade from txreenwicn 


10 last 


Cu>t Espichel 


\Se tubal 




Caph st. Vincent 



N.W. AFRICA, 

MAROCCO ALGERIA & TUNIS 


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Burfadido^-Ha«iEinada ,:,47 / AX \’■ ■ "• ; -v. : S:"-' -•VWjr El Udj ?Tim&dulen_ 

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United States 


809.262,000 


Prance 


318,220,000 


India 


217,87o,290 


Russia 


210,542,870 


Austria-Hungary 


Germany 


Spain 


Italy 


Great Britain A Ireland 


140,487,986 


114 500.000 


101,156,875 


99,851.308 


74,701,000 


Houmonla 


Australia 

47,48S,(J00 


Turkey 


Canada 32,000.000 


Alg< 


51 ,o:;.coo 


42.503.000 


DIAGRAM 

SHOWING THE 

WHEAT CROP, 

OF THE 

J *IUXCIJPAL COWSTIUJtS 
— or — 

THE WORLD, 

FOR 1890. 

(IN BUSHELS.) 


rla 19.802.500 


Belgium 14.870.000 


Egypt 11.181,500 


Connecticut 

a 

New Hampshire 
Nevada 

Mississippi 

Arizona 

Vermont 

Maine 

South Carolina 
Delaware 

New Mexico 
Alabama 
Idaho 
Georgia 
Montana 
Colorado 
New Jersey 
Utah 

West Virginia 
North Carolina 
Texas 

Virginia 
Maryland 

Tennessee 




30,000 

140,000 

250,000 

280,000 

311,000 

835.000 

543,000 

750,000 

019,000 

1,105.000 

1,319,000 

1,370,000 

1,411,000 

1,488.000 

1,5 * 5,000 
1,680,000 
2,279,000 
2,326.000 
3.156.000 
3,57 o,000 

5.614,000 

0,20S,000 

7,873,000 



Washington 

8,071,000 



Kentucky 

9,162.000 



Netv York 

9,288,000 



Oregon 

!2.S05,000 


Wisconsin 

13,096,000 

Nebraska 

15,015,000 


Pacific Ocean 


78,000,000 


Atlantic Ocean 


25.000,000 

Southern Ocean to 30' 

% 


25,000,000 


Indian Ocean 

14,009,000 


Northern Ocean 


DIAGRAM 

Showing The Comparative 
- AREA OF - 

OCEANS 

AND 

SEAS, 

IN SQUARE MILES. 


Pennsylvania 


16,049.000 


Missouri 


17,088,000 



Illinois 


18,161,000 


Iowa 


19,041,000 

Michigan 


20,2 

Indiana 


WHEAT CROP 

2 


27,92S,000 I 


L 


Kansas 


OF THE 


28,195,000 


California 


UNITED STATES, 


29.121,000 


Ohio 


TOT 1890, 


Minnesota 


In Bushels. 


N.AS.Dakota 


5.000,000 


mediterranean Sea 

1,000,000 


Caspian Sea 
170,000 

•Baltic Sea J 75.000 


Black Sea 170,000 


North Sea 160,060 


SeaofAral 30,000 


Dead Sea 


803 


29,984,000 


38 35G.000 


49.111,000 


186 





































































































































































Pennsylvania 


70,372,857 


Illinois 


Ohio 


"W 3st Virginia 
I( wa 

V ' 

"33 aryland 
Ir idiana 


10,278,890 

9 , 000,000 

4,830,820 

4,562,000 

3,326,000 

3,158,000 


issouri 

3,100,000 

ennessee 

1,950,000 

.entucky 

1,900,000 

;<jlorado 

1,800,000 

Kansas 

1,650,000 

Wyoming 

1,200,000 

Virginia 

928,560 

Washington 

805,600 

Indian Ter. 

725,500 

New "Mexico 

560,000 

-4 

Georgia 

375,000 

Utah 

205,000 

Arkansas 

180,000 

Texas 

90,000 

Michigan 

85,000 

California 

65,000 

Dakota 

30,000 

North Carolina 

20,000 

Montana 

. 10,000 

Nebraska 

1,500 


.DIAGRAM, 

Showing the_Annual 

COAL, PRODUCTION, 

OF THE 

UNITED STATES, 

IN TONS. 


Germany 


United States 


Great Britain 


diagram 

Showing the Comparative 

AREA OE 

PRINCIPAL LAKES, 

OF THE 

WORLD, 

IN SQUARE MILES. 


Sweden 


Japan 


Chili 


India 


Spain 1,300,000 

I 


135,000 


650,000 


950,000 


1 , 100,000 


lake Ladoga 


lake Ontario 


Lake Nicaragua 


Lake Titicaca 


Great Salt Lake 


Canada 


Australia 


China 


Russia 


1,600,000 


2,500,000 


3,250,000 


DIAGRAM 
Showing the Annual 

COAL PRODUCTION, 

OF THE 

WORLD, ' 

IN TONS. 


3,600,000 


Belgium 17,000,000 


Austria- 

Hungary 


17,250,000 


France 


21,500,000 


75,000,000 



6,804 


6,300 


6,000 


3,012 


1,875 



































































































































Iowa 232,430,000 


CORN IN Ii US 11 ELS 


Illinois 187,440,000 


Missouri 175,345,000 


Minnesota 21,286,000 
New York .17,101,000 


Indiana SO,02.',,000 


Tennessee 67,092,000 


Ohio 65,876,000 




Texas 03,802,000 


Kentucky 68,645,000 


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Nebraska 53,310,000 


Kansas 55,269,000 

i 


Pennsylvania 


38,043,000 


Virginia 86j922,000 


North Carolina 36,064,000 


Arkansas 33,443,000 



Wisconsin 


33,061.000 


a 

a 

s 

- 


Georgia 3^,300,000 
26,580,000 


Michigan 


Alabama 25,390,000 


Mississippi 24,390,000 


Louisiana 16,979,000 


Maryland 16,333,000 


South Carolina 16,078,000 

West Virginia 13,435,000 

North and South Dakota 12,030,000 

New Jersey 11,185,000 

Florida 1,570,000 

Caliroruia 4.396,000 

Delaware >4.128,000 

Connecticut 2,014,000 

Massachusetts 1,868,000 

Vermont 1,839,000 

New Hampshire 1.259,000 


DIAGRAM 

SHOWING THE 

CORN AND ORCHARD, 

-. ALSO THE - 

GOLD AND SILVER 

PRODUCTION, 

-‘ OF THE - 

UNITED STATES, 

FROM. 1702 TO 1891. 


WHERE OUIt COLD COMES FROM. 


California 


$843,250,750 


He lined Uullion 


$257,048,392.52 


Montana $71,827 000 
Colorado $61,000,000 


J"Idaho $43,867,000 
Nevada $40,785,210 
Dakota $34,327,042 
Oregon $30,000,000 
Nortli Carolina $17,682,000 
Parted from silver $10,699,768.48 
Arizona $11,625,000 
New Mexico $11,316,000 
Various sources $10,672,000.26 
Georgia $4,306,000 
Virginia $1,713,089 
South Carolina $1,501,390 


Wyoming produced $630,201.00 and Utah $978,027.52. The go'J 
product of states and territories not included in the 
above column is much less in each case and 
ranges from 8315.315.00 (Washington 
Territory) to $40.13 (Indiana.) 


Indiana 

Nebraska 

Massachusetts 

Texas 

Maryland 
Maine 
New Hampshire 
Vermont 

__ Tennessee 

_ Alaska 

Alabama 
Washington Territory 
Contained in gold 
Wyoming 
South Carolina 
Virginia 
Michigan 
Georgia 
Parted from gold 
Contained in silver 
Parted from 
North Ca 
Ne-y Mexico 
Oregon 

North and South Dakota 
Arizona 

Various Sources ! 
Idaho 

Utali r 

Colorado 
Montana 
Nevada 


$40 

$159 

$913 
$2,001 
$3,629 
$5,<?60 
$11,021 
$3o,5o8 
$87,417 
$102,502 
$225,524 
$356,955 
$526,284.79 
$754,488 
$1,562,390 
$1,713,276 
$3,601,735 
$4,308,861 
^[$7,073,251.08 
$9,322,208.97 
48 


WHERE OUR SILVER COMES FROM. 


Nevada 


$140,000,000 


Heflncd bullion 


$113,830,795.01 


Colorado $70,000,000 


Montana $65,038,000 


Utah $64,000,000 


Various sources $33,411,329.84 
Arizona $29,780,000 


Idaho $20,000,000 


■ silver ] | $10,699,768.4 

rolina I j $17,758,000 
[exlco ] $24,888,500 


$24,888,500 
$30,255,000 
$37,327,642 
$42,375,000 
$44,083,390.10 
$63,867,000 
$85,319,832 
$131,000,000 
134.465,420 

$1S0,785,210 


New Mexico $13,564,000 
California $5,600,000 
Michigan $3,590,002 
Dakota $3,500,000 
Contained In gold $526,284.79 
Oregon $255,000 
North Carolina $70,600 
Wyoming $11,926 


Texas produced 82,0)0.90, Georgia, $2,13i.00 and Alaska 81,050.00, 
The silver production of states and territories not included 
in the above column is much less In each case and 
;anges from 8967.02 (Washington Territory ) 
to $2.42 (.Nebraska.; 


Heflncd bullion 


TOTAL GOLD AND SILVER. 


$370,879,187.53 


California 


8899,250,750 


188 












































































































































































































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Site... 

pneumatic 



IS easily and readily learnt. 

IS reasonable in price. 
IS simple in construction. 

IS never out of order. 


IS A NEW DEVICE. 


Par Superior in * 

* every Particular 

to any other, for aiding the 
crayon, pastel, charcoal or water 
color Artist, in the production 
of effects, with 

Rapidity ar?d p<?rfcctr?<?55 

that can not be accomplished 
without its use. 

WRITE FOR 

DESCRIPTIVE 
CIRCULAR,_ 

Tlje pneumatic pencil (Jo. 

21 QUINGy ST., CHICAGO, ILL. 


G. H. MIGH&LL, 

Wholesale and Retail 



GROCER provision dealer 

Detroit Opera House BIk., DETROIT, MICH. 


OUR LEADING SPECIALTIES. 


Michell’s “Select” Baking Powder. Michell’s “Select” French Cream Candies. 

Michell’s “Select” Flavoring Extracts. Michell’s “Old Rotterdam” Java Coffee. 

Michell’s “Select” Spices. Michell’s “Fancy Roller” Flour. 


We manufacture our own Flavoring Extracts, Baking Powder. Blueing, Confectionery. 

We grind our own Spices. 

We roast and grind our own Coffees. . 

All goods delivered to Railroad Depots or Boats free of charge, and any place in the city. 

In ordering goods, please state by what Railroad, Express or Boat you wish them shipped, also give your nearest 
Railroad Station. 


C. H. MICHELL, 


DETROIT OPERA HOUSE BLOCK 

DETROIT, MICH. 




























































































































































































































































































































































♦ . . 


. 






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M/^NUF'ftCT URERS OF 


igh 


PlftNO CflStD ORGANS ft SPECIALTY. 


Larsre Retail Rooms in connection with the factory. Visitors are always kindly received. Parties making purchases 
lirect from factory from localities where we have no representative, or where the goods may not have been mtroduc , 
vill be given a special introductory price, and expenses for transportation fully paid. CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED. 

Instruments Sent on Approval to Parties Desirino to Make Purchases. 


nstruments Only,.. 


J NO. A. Baldwin, Pres. L. Tyler, Vice-Pres. B. W. Price, Sec’y. H. P. Stentz, Treas. M. C. Price, Manager. 

IM EDNA PlftNO MO ORGAN 60 . 


MONROEVILLE, OHIO. 




























































































































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